Collective phenomena in crowds - where pedestrian dynamics need social psychology
Anna Sieben, Jette Schumann, Armin Seyfried

TL;DR
This paper explores how pedestrian crowd behavior during gatherings involves social psychological factors, emphasizing the need for interdisciplinary models that incorporate social norms, identities, and strategies alongside physical dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a framework distinguishing situations where natural science models suffice from those requiring social psychology insights, demonstrated through an experiment analyzing crowd entry behavior.
Findings
Physical measures show structure influences crowd dynamics.
Questionnaire reveals social norms differ by structure.
Subjective perceptions often diverge from physical data.
Abstract
This article is on collective phenomena in pedestrian dynamics during the assembling and dispersal phases of gatherings. To date pedestrian dynamics have been primarily studied in the natural and engineering sciences. Pedestrians are analyzed and modeled as driven particles revealing self-organizing phenomena and complex transport characteristics. However, pedestrians in crowds also behave as living beings according to stimulus-response mechanisms or act as human subjects on the basis of social norms, social identities or strategies. To show where pedestrian dynamics need social psychology in addition to the natural sciences we propose the application of three categories: phenomena, behavior and action. They permit a clear discrimination between situations in which minimal models from the natural sciences are appropriate and those in which sociological and psychological concepts are…
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