17 Crowds and Collective Behavior
17 Crowds and Collective Behavior
17 Crowds and Collective Behavior
Crowds and
Collective
Behavior
Movements
Emergent norms
Social identity
Hajj to Mecca
What is
Collective
Behavior?
Collectives:
Relatively large
aggregations of
individuals who
display similarities
in action and
outlook.
Examples…………..
McPhail,
Schweingrube, &
Turner’s
observation system
Queues, Mobs, Panics
Queues
shapes of lines and
electronic queues
Milgram’s studies of
linebreaking
Mobs
lynch mobs Sound of Music Flash Mob
hooliganism
riots
flash
Panics
http://oddculture.com/weird-news-stories/black-friday-mob-history/
escape
acquisition
Collective Movements
Rumors as
collective
processes
Mass hysteria
The War of the
Worlds
broadcast
Psychogenic
illness
Trends, Social Movements
• Fads
Trends • Crazes
• Trends (fashion, etc.)
• Reformist
Social • Revolutionary
Movements • Reactionary
• Communitarian
Collective Dynamics
D. H. Lawrence
Conditions of Deindividuation
State of Deindividuation
Anonymity
Deindividuated Behaviors
Responsibility Loss of self-awareness
Group membership ↓ Behavior is emotional,
Others (overload, Loss of self-regulation impulsive, irrational,
drug usage, chanting) 1. Low self-monitoring regressive, with high
intensity
2. Failure of normative 1. Not under stimulus
control control
3. Decline in self- 2. Counternormative
generated
reinforcements 3. Pleasurable
4. Failure to form long-
range plans
Zimbardo’s deindividuation theory
reduced
responsibility
(diffusion of
responsibility)
membership in
large groups
heightened state of
physiological
arousal
The Deindividuated State
Collective behavior is
sustained by identity
processes
collectives sustain rather than undermine individuals’
identities
ingroup/outgroup processes increase self-categorization
individuation: collective behavior in some cases
represents an attempt to reestablish a sense of
individuality
Conclusions
about
Collectives
The “crowd‑as‑mad”
assumption: Collectives
differ from more
routine groups in kind
rather than in degree
Movements
Emergent norms
Social identity