Crowd behaviour is a complex and dynamic phenomenon. A scarcity of testable theories together with difficulties in performing controlled experiments make understanding of crowd behaviour a challenge. The thesis of Nanda Weijermans sets out to increase understanding of crowd behaviour.
Despite the myths about crowd behaviour, current crowd research indicates that crowd behaviour is context dependent, dynamic and generated by individuals. Given the current state of knowledge and the fact that controlled experiments on crowds cannot be performed, both the need for a theory that reflects the dynamic interplay between individuals and their environment as the need for a method that allows for testing theory were identified.
The CROSS model developed in this thesis, meets these two needs. CROSS advances by adding a description of behaviour at the cognitive (intra-individual) level as well as the use of simulation experiment to test theory. By means of these simulation experiments the formation and change of crowd behaviour patterns is explored in a festival setting. Results of these experiments indicate that a distinction can be made between the physical context predominantly affecting what is of influence on behaviour, whereas the social context plays affects how behaviour is influenced. The results indicate that explanation of crowd behaviour always requires a complete image of the interplay between individuals and their context. Overall, a different light is shed on crowd behaviour by the multi-disciplinary approach taken in theory building and the method used by CROSS.
Curriculum vitae
Nanda Wijermans (The Hague, 1981) studied Artificial Intelligence in Groningen and conducted het PhD at Strategy and Innovation of SOM research school at teh Faculty of Economics and Business, in cooperation with 'TNO Defensie en Veiligheid' in Soesterberg, departmenr Human in Command. Wijermans is currently post-doc at Utrecht University at the department of Geography. She will be awarded her PhD on 21 April 2011(2.45pm). Her thesis supervisor is prof.dr. R.J.J.M. Jorna, and the thesis title: Understanding crowd behaviour. Simulating situated individuals.