Department of Sociology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Psychology, Fylde College, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom.
Aggress Behav. 2019 Nov;45(6):598-609. doi: 10.1002/ab.21853. Epub 2019 Jul 29.
Are individuals willing to intervene in public violence? Half a century of research on the "bystander effect" suggests that the more bystanders present at an emergency, the less likely each of them is to provide help. However, recent meta-analytical evidence questions whether this effect generalizes to violent emergencies. Besides the number of bystanders present, an alternative line of research suggests that pre-existing social relations between bystanders and conflict participants are important for explaining whether bystanders provide help. The current paper offers a rare comparison of both factors-social relations and the number of bystanders present-as predictors of bystander intervention in real-life violent emergencies. We systematically observed the behavior of 764 bystanders across 81 violent incidents recorded by surveillance cameras in Copenhagen, Denmark. Bystanders were sampled with a case-control design, their behavior was observed and coded, and the probability of intervention was estimated with multilevel regression analyses. The results confirm our predicted association between social relations and intervention. However, rather than the expected reversed bystander effect, we found a classical bystander effect, as bystanders were less likely to intervene with increasing bystander presence. The effect of social relations on intervention was larger in magnitude than the effect of the number of bystanders. We assess these findings in light of recent discussions about the influence of group size and social relations in human helping. Further, we discuss the utility of video data for the assessment of real-life bystander behavior.
个体是否愿意干预公共暴力事件?半个世纪以来,关于“旁观者效应”的研究表明,在紧急情况下旁观者越多,他们每个人提供帮助的可能性就越小。然而,最近的元分析证据质疑这种效应是否适用于暴力紧急情况。除了旁观者的数量外,另一种研究思路表明,旁观者和冲突参与者之间预先存在的社会关系对于解释旁观者是否提供帮助很重要。本文提供了对两种因素——社会关系和在场旁观者数量——作为预测现实生活中暴力紧急情况下旁观者干预的因素的罕见比较。我们系统地观察了 764 名旁观者在丹麦哥本哈根的 81 个暴力事件中通过监控摄像头记录的行为。旁观者采用病例对照设计进行抽样,观察并编码他们的行为,并使用多层回归分析估计干预的概率。结果证实了我们对社会关系和干预之间的预期关联的预测。然而,我们发现的不是预期的相反旁观者效应,而是经典的旁观者效应,即随着旁观者数量的增加,旁观者更不可能进行干预。社会关系对干预的影响大于旁观者数量的影响。我们根据最近关于群体规模和人类帮助中的社会关系的影响的讨论来评估这些发现。此外,我们还讨论了视频数据在评估现实生活中的旁观者行为方面的效用。