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Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study

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Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study. / Rovira, A.; Southern, R.; Swapp, D. et al.
In: SAGE Open, Vol. 11, No. 3, 25.08.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rovira, A, Southern, R, Swapp, D, Campbell, C, Zhang, JJ, Levine, M & Slater, M 2021, 'Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study', SAGE Open, vol. 11, no. 3. https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211040076

APA

Rovira, A., Southern, R., Swapp, D., Campbell, C., Zhang, J. J., Levine, M., & Slater, M. (2021). Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study. SAGE Open, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211040076

Vancouver

Rovira A, Southern R, Swapp D, Campbell C, Zhang JJ, Levine M et al. Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study. SAGE Open. 2021 Aug 25;11(3). Epub 2021 Aug 25. doi: 10.1177/21582440211040076

Author

Rovira, A. ; Southern, R. ; Swapp, D. et al. / Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior : A Virtual Reality Study. In: SAGE Open. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{abc1b9976f344cdabe8ea7b4fa64a624,
title = "Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior: A Virtual Reality Study",
abstract = "Traditional work on bystander intervention in violent emergencies has found that the larger the group, the less the chance that any individual will intervene. Here, we tested the impact on helping behavior of the affiliation of the bystanders with respect to the participants. We recruited 40 male supporters of the U.K. Arsenal football club for a two-factor between groups study with 10 participants per group. Each participant spoke with a virtual human Arsenal supporter (V), the scenario displayed in a virtual reality system. During this conversation, another virtual character (P), not an Arsenal fan, verbally abused V for being an Arsenal fan leading eventually to physical pushing. There was a group of three virtual bystanders who were all either Arsenal supporters indicated by their shirts, or football fans wearing unbranded shirts. These bystanders either encouraged the participant to intervene or dissuaded him. We recorded the number of times that participants intervened to help V during the aggression. We found that participants were more likely to intervene when the bystanders were out-group with respect to the participant. By comparing levels of intervention with a “baseline” study (identical except for the presence of bystanders), we conclude that the presence of in-group bystanders decreases helping. We argue therefore that, other things being equal, diffusion of responsibility is more likely to be overcome when participant and victim share group membership, but bystanders do not. Our findings help to develop understanding of how diffusion of responsibility works by combining elements of both the bystander effect and the social identity approach to bystander behavior. ",
keywords = "bystander effect, diffusion of responsibility, social identity approach, violence, virtual reality",
author = "A. Rovira and R. Southern and D. Swapp and C. Campbell and J.J. Zhang and M. Levine and M. Slater",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "25",
doi = "10.1177/21582440211040076",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "SAGE Open",
issn = "2158-2440",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bystander Affiliation Influences Intervention Behavior

T2 - A Virtual Reality Study

AU - Rovira, A.

AU - Southern, R.

AU - Swapp, D.

AU - Campbell, C.

AU - Zhang, J.J.

AU - Levine, M.

AU - Slater, M.

PY - 2021/8/25

Y1 - 2021/8/25

N2 - Traditional work on bystander intervention in violent emergencies has found that the larger the group, the less the chance that any individual will intervene. Here, we tested the impact on helping behavior of the affiliation of the bystanders with respect to the participants. We recruited 40 male supporters of the U.K. Arsenal football club for a two-factor between groups study with 10 participants per group. Each participant spoke with a virtual human Arsenal supporter (V), the scenario displayed in a virtual reality system. During this conversation, another virtual character (P), not an Arsenal fan, verbally abused V for being an Arsenal fan leading eventually to physical pushing. There was a group of three virtual bystanders who were all either Arsenal supporters indicated by their shirts, or football fans wearing unbranded shirts. These bystanders either encouraged the participant to intervene or dissuaded him. We recorded the number of times that participants intervened to help V during the aggression. We found that participants were more likely to intervene when the bystanders were out-group with respect to the participant. By comparing levels of intervention with a “baseline” study (identical except for the presence of bystanders), we conclude that the presence of in-group bystanders decreases helping. We argue therefore that, other things being equal, diffusion of responsibility is more likely to be overcome when participant and victim share group membership, but bystanders do not. Our findings help to develop understanding of how diffusion of responsibility works by combining elements of both the bystander effect and the social identity approach to bystander behavior.

AB - Traditional work on bystander intervention in violent emergencies has found that the larger the group, the less the chance that any individual will intervene. Here, we tested the impact on helping behavior of the affiliation of the bystanders with respect to the participants. We recruited 40 male supporters of the U.K. Arsenal football club for a two-factor between groups study with 10 participants per group. Each participant spoke with a virtual human Arsenal supporter (V), the scenario displayed in a virtual reality system. During this conversation, another virtual character (P), not an Arsenal fan, verbally abused V for being an Arsenal fan leading eventually to physical pushing. There was a group of three virtual bystanders who were all either Arsenal supporters indicated by their shirts, or football fans wearing unbranded shirts. These bystanders either encouraged the participant to intervene or dissuaded him. We recorded the number of times that participants intervened to help V during the aggression. We found that participants were more likely to intervene when the bystanders were out-group with respect to the participant. By comparing levels of intervention with a “baseline” study (identical except for the presence of bystanders), we conclude that the presence of in-group bystanders decreases helping. We argue therefore that, other things being equal, diffusion of responsibility is more likely to be overcome when participant and victim share group membership, but bystanders do not. Our findings help to develop understanding of how diffusion of responsibility works by combining elements of both the bystander effect and the social identity approach to bystander behavior.

KW - bystander effect

KW - diffusion of responsibility

KW - social identity approach

KW - violence

KW - virtual reality

U2 - 10.1177/21582440211040076

DO - 10.1177/21582440211040076

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

JO - SAGE Open

JF - SAGE Open

SN - 2158-2440

IS - 3

ER -