Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. We surveyed participants at two crowd events to test the prediction of self-categorization theory that variable emotional responses to crowding are a function of social identification with the crowd. In data collected from participants who attended a crowded outdoor music event (n = 48), identification with the crowd predicted feeling less crowded; and there was an indirect effect of identification with the crowd on positive emotion through feeling less crowded. Identification with the crowd also moderated the relation between feeling less crowded and positive emotion. In data collected at a demonstration march (n = 112), identification with ...
This research was supported by an ESRC Postgraduate Studentship (PTA-030-2006-00100) awarded to the ...
Two main topics are analysed in this paper: a crowding model for an urban destination is tested by t...
Feeling crowded in a shopping environment can decrease consumers’ evaluations of a product or servic...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
A good deal of research has recently been directed at analyzing the relationship between population ...
Humans encounter crowd situations on a daily basis, resulting in both negative and positive experien...
We investigated the intensely positive emotional experiences arising from participation in a large-s...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 71-78)This experiment is an attempt to apply the cognitiv...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
Social identity research on crowds demonstrates how cognitive self-definition as a crowd member resu...
With the growth of global population, the big cities become increasingly crowded. It is not rare to ...
We investigated the intensely positive emotional experiences arising from participation in a large-s...
Feeling crowded in a shopping environment can decrease consumers’ evaluations of a product or servic...
This research was supported by an ESRC Postgraduate Studentship (PTA-030-2006-00100) awarded to the ...
Two main topics are analysed in this paper: a crowding model for an urban destination is tested by t...
Feeling crowded in a shopping environment can decrease consumers’ evaluations of a product or servic...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
Exposure to crowding is said to be aversive, yet people also seek out and enjoy crowded situations. ...
A good deal of research has recently been directed at analyzing the relationship between population ...
Humans encounter crowd situations on a daily basis, resulting in both negative and positive experien...
We investigated the intensely positive emotional experiences arising from participation in a large-s...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 71-78)This experiment is an attempt to apply the cognitiv...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
Social identity research on crowds demonstrates how cognitive self-definition as a crowd member resu...
With the growth of global population, the big cities become increasingly crowded. It is not rare to ...
We investigated the intensely positive emotional experiences arising from participation in a large-s...
Feeling crowded in a shopping environment can decrease consumers’ evaluations of a product or servic...
This research was supported by an ESRC Postgraduate Studentship (PTA-030-2006-00100) awarded to the ...
Two main topics are analysed in this paper: a crowding model for an urban destination is tested by t...
Feeling crowded in a shopping environment can decrease consumers’ evaluations of a product or servic...