enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Deindividuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deindividuation

    Deindividuation is a concept in social psychology that is generally thought of as the loss of self-awareness [1] in groups, although this is a matter of contention ...

  3. Social identity model of deindividuation effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_identity_model_of...

    For example, deindividuation has been found to foster group identification and to induce greater opinion polarization in small groups communicating online. [20] In order to understand effects of factors such as anonymity and reduced cues on group behavior, one needs to take the social and inter-group context into account.

  4. Crowd psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowd_psychology

    The psychology of a crowd is a collective behaviour realised by the individuals within it. A category of social psychology known as "crowd psychology" or "mob psychology" examines how the psychology of a group of people differs from the psychology of any one person within the group.

  5. Individuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individuation

    In analytical psychology, individuation is the process by which the individual self develops out of an undifferentiated unconscious – seen as a developmental psychic process during which innate elements of personality, the components of the immature psyche, and the experiences of the person's life become, if the process is more or less successful, integrated over time into a well-functioning ...

  6. Baiting crowd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baiting_crowd

    This is caused through deindividuation which is a process whereby people lose their sense of socialized individual identity and often show unsocialized and even antisocial behavior. [1] In this situation people often blur their normal behaviors, leading to an increase in impulsive and deviant behavior .

  7. Bystander effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bystander_effect

    Fraser and Colman stated that bystander apathy, deindividuation, conformity and group polarization were extenuating factors in the killing of the four strike breakers. They explained that deindividuation may affect group members' ability to realize that they are still accountable for their individual actions even when with a group.

  8. Depersonalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depersonalization

    Depersonalization is a dissociative phenomenon characterized by a subjective feeling of detachment from oneself, manifesting as a sense of disconnection from one's thoughts, emotions, sensations, or actions, and often accompanied by a feeling of observing oneself from an external perspective.

  9. Self-categorization theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-categorization_theory

    A loss of self is sometimes referred to using the alternative term deindividuation. Further, although the term depersonalization has been used in clinical psychology to describe a type of disordered experience, this is completely different from depersonalization in the sense intended by self-categorization theory authors.