Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure to explain the apparent group-boundaries present in ‘passive’ social influence invites an explanation for behaviours incorporating social identification. In an online study aimed at investigating the role of social influence in the spread of contagious behaviour: scratching. Participants were presented with a video of a man identified as Scottish scratching or not scratching. The participants’ level of social identification with the scratching target was manipulated so that they viewed the actors as belonging to either an ingroup (British) or outgroup (English). Scratching by participants was both observed using a webcam and measured with a s...
Previous research has shown that riots spread across multiple locations, but has not explained under...
This data archive contains 224 transcripts of participant testimonies of a sample of people involved...
This work was supported by a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/N0...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between shared social identity and the transmission...
This study used an innovative design which presented a large number of participants (N = 1139) with ...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This experiment was the first of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social i...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This study was designed to investigate the role of social influence on the transmission of behaviour...
This study was designed to investigate the role of social influence on the transmission of behaviour...
This study investigated the degree to which social identity influenced the transmission of behaviour...
Previous research has shown that riots spread across multiple locations, but has not explained under...
This data archive contains 224 transcripts of participant testimonies of a sample of people involved...
This work was supported by a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/N0...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
Research into ‘contagion’ has been applied to a range of different behaviours. However, the failure ...
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between shared social identity and the transmission...
This study used an innovative design which presented a large number of participants (N = 1139) with ...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This experiment was the first of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social i...
This experiment was one of a series of experiments aimed at investigating the role of social identit...
This study was designed to investigate the role of social influence on the transmission of behaviour...
This study was designed to investigate the role of social influence on the transmission of behaviour...
This study investigated the degree to which social identity influenced the transmission of behaviour...
Previous research has shown that riots spread across multiple locations, but has not explained under...
This data archive contains 224 transcripts of participant testimonies of a sample of people involved...
This work was supported by a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/N0...