A revolutionary crowd model: Implemented to contrast oscillating to consistent media influence on crowd behavior
Authored by Yasser Ibrahim, Rasha Hassan
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1177/0037549717702722
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Abstract
Since Le Bon introduced his profound theory about the crowd in 1895, the
phenomenon has been investigated across a range of scientific
disciplines. Nevertheless, the mystery of the popular mind seems so far
unrevealed, especially with the emergence of unfamiliar crowd movements,
such as Twitter revolutions, which are triggered by novel types of media
and interpersonal communication. Such original collective behavior,
along with the current turbulent sociopolitical global environment, has
necessitated the development of explanatory contemporary models. This
research introduces a new revolutionary crowd model with a unique set of
internal and external factors that can fit the modern uprisings in order
to enable the understanding of the conditions that could lead to or
prohibit the formation of revolutionary crowds. The model is implemented
to examine the effectiveness of oscillating intensified mass media on
the crowd pattern and dynamics. Among several emergent behaviors, the
model shows an insignificant impact of disrupted intensified media on
the crowd, in contrast with consistent low-intensity media, the failure
of contagion theory in sustaining a revolution without a persistent
stimulus, and the refutation of current claims of the insignificancy of
leaders' roles in igniting and maintaining modern crowds.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Mass Media
Revolutionary crowd model
Intensified media
Sociopolitical
transformation