Avalanches of choice: how stranger-to-stranger interactions shape crowd dynamics
Ziqi Wang, Alessandro Gabbana, Federico Toschi

TL;DR
This study reveals that strangers in crowded spaces tend to imitate the path choices of the person in front of them, significantly influencing crowd movement patterns despite no social ties.
Contribution
It uncovers the role of local imitation among strangers in shaping collective pedestrian dynamics and introduces a stochastic model to replicate this behavior.
Findings
Strangers often follow the same route as the person ahead, even if longer.
Imitation behavior causes bursty, correlated decision sequences in crowds.
A stochastic model incorporating imitation accurately reproduces observed patterns.
Abstract
Pedestrian routing choices play a crucial role in shaping collective crowd dynamics, yet the influence of interactions among unfamiliar individuals remains poorly understood. In this study, we analyze real-world pedestrian behavior at a route split within a busy train station using high-resolution trajectory data collected over a three-year time frame. We disclose a striking tendency for individuals to follow the same path as the person directly in front of them, even in the absence of social ties and even when such a choice leads to a longer travel time. This tendency leads to bursty dynamics, where sequences of pedestrians make identical decisions in succession, leading to strong patterns in collective movement. We employ a stochastic model that includes route costs, randomness, and social imitation to accurately reproduce the observed behavior, highlighting that local imitation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvacuation and Crowd Dynamics · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Urban Design and Spatial Analysis
