Panic That Spreads Sociobehavioral Contagion in Pedestrian Evacuations
Authored by Terra Elzie, Erika Frydenlund, Andrew J Collins, R Michael Robinson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3141/2586-01
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Abstract
Crowds are a part of everyday public life, from stadiums and arenas to
school hallways. Occasionally, pushing within the crowd spontaneously
escalates to crushing behavior, resulting in injuries and even death.
The rarity and unpredictability of these incidents provides few options
to collect data for research on the prediction and prevention of
hazardous emergent behaviors in crowds. This study takes a close look at
the way states of agitation, such as panic, can spread through crowds.
Group composition mainly family groups composed of members with
differing mobility levels plays an important role in the spread of
agitation through the crowd, ultimately affecting the exit density and
evacuation clearance time of a simulated venue. This study used an
agent-based model of pedestrian movement during the egress of a
hypothetical room and adopted an emotional, cognitive, and social
framework to explore the transference and dissipation of agitation
through a crowd. The preliminary results reveal that average group size
in a crowd is a primary contributor to the exit density and evacuation
clearance time. The study provides the groundwork on which to build more
elaborate models that incorporate sociobehavioral aspects to simulate
human movement during panic situations and account for the potential for
dangerous behavior to emerge in crowds.
Tags
Simulation
Dynamics
Agents
crowd
Flow
Behaviors
Egress