Halberstadt Jamin, Jackson Joshua Conrad, Bilkey David, Jong Jonathan, Whitehouse Harvey, McNaughton Craig, Zollmann Stefanie
Department of Psychology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Mar 23;11(3):e0149880. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149880. eCollection 2016.
Social psychology is fundamentally the study of individuals in groups, yet there remain basic unanswered questions about group formation, structure, and change. We argue that the problem is methodological. Until recently, there was no way to track who was interacting with whom with anything approximating valid resolution and scale. In the current study we describe a new method that applies recent advances in image-based tracking to study incipient group formation and evolution with experimental precision and control. In this method, which we term "in vivo behavioral tracking," we track individuals' movements with a high definition video camera mounted atop a large field laboratory. We report results of an initial study that quantifies the composition, structure, and size of the incipient groups. We also apply in-vivo spatial tracking to study participants' tendency to cooperate as a function of their embeddedness in those crowds. We find that participants form groups of seven on average, are more likely to approach others of similar attractiveness and (to a lesser extent) gender, and that participants' gender and attractiveness are both associated with their proximity to the spatial center of groups (such that women and attractive individuals are more likely than men and unattractive individuals to end up in the center of their groups). Furthermore, participants' proximity to others early in the study predicted the effort they exerted in a subsequent cooperative task, suggesting that submergence in a crowd may predict social loafing. We conclude that in vivo behavioral tracking is a uniquely powerful new tool for answering longstanding, fundamental questions about group dynamics.
社会心理学从根本上来说是对群体中的个体进行研究,但关于群体的形成、结构和变化,仍存在一些基本的未解之谜。我们认为问题出在方法论上。直到最近,还没有办法以接近有效分辨率和规模的方式追踪谁与谁在互动。在当前的研究中,我们描述了一种新方法,该方法应用基于图像的追踪技术的最新进展,以实验精度和控制来研究初始群体的形成和演变。在这种我们称之为“体内行为追踪”的方法中,我们使用安装在大型野外实验室顶部的高清摄像机来追踪个体的行动。我们报告了一项初步研究的结果,该研究量化了初始群体的组成、结构和规模。我们还应用体内空间追踪来研究参与者作为其在人群中融入程度的函数的合作倾向。我们发现,参与者平均形成七人一组,更有可能接近具有相似吸引力以及(在较小程度上)相同性别的其他人,并且参与者的性别和吸引力都与他们到群体空间中心的距离有关(也就是说,女性和有吸引力的个体比男性和没有吸引力的个体更有可能最终处于其群体的中心)。此外,在研究早期参与者与他人的接近程度预测了他们在随后的合作任务中付出的努力,这表明融入人群可能预示着社会惰化。我们得出结论,体内行为追踪是回答关于群体动态的长期基本问题的一种独特而强大的新工具。