The Bethnal Green tube shelter disaster, in which 173 people died, is a significant event in both history and psychology. While notions of “panic” and “stampede” have been discredited in contemporary psychology and disaster research as explanations for crowd crushes, some have cited Bethnal Green as the exception that proves the rule. Alternative explanations for crushing disasters focus on mismanagement and physical factors, and lack a psychology. We analysed 85 witness statements from the Bethnal Green tragedy to develop a new psychological account of crowd disasters. Contrary to the established view of the Bethnal Green disaster as caused by widespread public overreaction to the sound of rockets, our analysis suggests that public percept...
Background. The three terms “panic”, “irrationality”, and “herding” are ubiquitous in the crowd dyna...
Although the idea of mass panic is quite common in reports on accidents involving crowds, most exper...
The portrayal of crowd accidents by the media can influence public understanding and emotional respo...
Among people who moved in large-scale gatherings of crowds, there are increased risks of injury and ...
Use of scientific knowledge in crowd psychology is low-level presently. Even the individual branches...
There is considerable evidence that psychological membership of crowds can protect people in dangero...
There is considerable evidence that psychological membership of crowds can protect people in dangero...
Existing psychological models of crowd behaviour were applied to examine emergency egress behaviour,...
Each year, crowd disasters happen in different areas of the world. How and why do such disasters hap...
During the Love Parade disaster in 2010 in Duisburg, Germany, twenty-one visitors lost their lives a...
A three year research project into human behaviour during emergency evacuations was conducted at the...
1, Oxford Street False Alarm, 24th November 2017 Collective false alarm incidents, where crowds of p...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This is a mixed methods study...
Popular representations of crowd behaviour in disasters are often characterised by irrationalist dis...
Background. The three terms “panic”, “irrationality”, and “herding” are ubiquitous in the crowd dyna...
Background. The three terms “panic”, “irrationality”, and “herding” are ubiquitous in the crowd dyna...
Although the idea of mass panic is quite common in reports on accidents involving crowds, most exper...
The portrayal of crowd accidents by the media can influence public understanding and emotional respo...
Among people who moved in large-scale gatherings of crowds, there are increased risks of injury and ...
Use of scientific knowledge in crowd psychology is low-level presently. Even the individual branches...
There is considerable evidence that psychological membership of crowds can protect people in dangero...
There is considerable evidence that psychological membership of crowds can protect people in dangero...
Existing psychological models of crowd behaviour were applied to examine emergency egress behaviour,...
Each year, crowd disasters happen in different areas of the world. How and why do such disasters hap...
During the Love Parade disaster in 2010 in Duisburg, Germany, twenty-one visitors lost their lives a...
A three year research project into human behaviour during emergency evacuations was conducted at the...
1, Oxford Street False Alarm, 24th November 2017 Collective false alarm incidents, where crowds of p...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This is a mixed methods study...
Popular representations of crowd behaviour in disasters are often characterised by irrationalist dis...
Background. The three terms “panic”, “irrationality”, and “herding” are ubiquitous in the crowd dyna...
Background. The three terms “panic”, “irrationality”, and “herding” are ubiquitous in the crowd dyna...
Although the idea of mass panic is quite common in reports on accidents involving crowds, most exper...
The portrayal of crowd accidents by the media can influence public understanding and emotional respo...