Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.

Social psychology is fundamentally the study of individuals in groups, yet there remain basic unanswered questions about group formation, structure, and change. We argue that the problem is methodological. Until recently, there was no way to track who was interacting with whom with anything approxim...

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Main Authors: Jamin Halberstadt, Joshua Conrad Jackson, David Bilkey, Jonathan Jong, Harvey Whitehouse, Craig McNaughton, Stefanie Zollmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149880
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spelling doaj-a403f6f259054b51a939e9922e8b79ce2021-03-03T19:56:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01113e014988010.1371/journal.pone.0149880Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.Jamin HalberstadtJoshua Conrad JacksonDavid BilkeyJonathan JongHarvey WhitehouseCraig McNaughtonStefanie ZollmannSocial psychology is fundamentally the study of individuals in groups, yet there remain basic unanswered questions about group formation, structure, and change. We argue that the problem is methodological. Until recently, there was no way to track who was interacting with whom with anything approximating valid resolution and scale. In the current study we describe a new method that applies recent advances in image-based tracking to study incipient group formation and evolution with experimental precision and control. In this method, which we term "in vivo behavioral tracking," we track individuals' movements with a high definition video camera mounted atop a large field laboratory. We report results of an initial study that quantifies the composition, structure, and size of the incipient groups. We also apply in-vivo spatial tracking to study participants' tendency to cooperate as a function of their embeddedness in those crowds. We find that participants form groups of seven on average, are more likely to approach others of similar attractiveness and (to a lesser extent) gender, and that participants' gender and attractiveness are both associated with their proximity to the spatial center of groups (such that women and attractive individuals are more likely than men and unattractive individuals to end up in the center of their groups). Furthermore, participants' proximity to others early in the study predicted the effort they exerted in a subsequent cooperative task, suggesting that submergence in a crowd may predict social loafing. We conclude that in vivo behavioral tracking is a uniquely powerful new tool for answering longstanding, fundamental questions about group dynamics.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149880
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jamin Halberstadt
Joshua Conrad Jackson
David Bilkey
Jonathan Jong
Harvey Whitehouse
Craig McNaughton
Stefanie Zollmann
spellingShingle Jamin Halberstadt
Joshua Conrad Jackson
David Bilkey
Jonathan Jong
Harvey Whitehouse
Craig McNaughton
Stefanie Zollmann
Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jamin Halberstadt
Joshua Conrad Jackson
David Bilkey
Jonathan Jong
Harvey Whitehouse
Craig McNaughton
Stefanie Zollmann
author_sort Jamin Halberstadt
title Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
title_short Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
title_full Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
title_fullStr Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
title_full_unstemmed Incipient Social Groups: An Analysis via In-Vivo Behavioral Tracking.
title_sort incipient social groups: an analysis via in-vivo behavioral tracking.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Social psychology is fundamentally the study of individuals in groups, yet there remain basic unanswered questions about group formation, structure, and change. We argue that the problem is methodological. Until recently, there was no way to track who was interacting with whom with anything approximating valid resolution and scale. In the current study we describe a new method that applies recent advances in image-based tracking to study incipient group formation and evolution with experimental precision and control. In this method, which we term "in vivo behavioral tracking," we track individuals' movements with a high definition video camera mounted atop a large field laboratory. We report results of an initial study that quantifies the composition, structure, and size of the incipient groups. We also apply in-vivo spatial tracking to study participants' tendency to cooperate as a function of their embeddedness in those crowds. We find that participants form groups of seven on average, are more likely to approach others of similar attractiveness and (to a lesser extent) gender, and that participants' gender and attractiveness are both associated with their proximity to the spatial center of groups (such that women and attractive individuals are more likely than men and unattractive individuals to end up in the center of their groups). Furthermore, participants' proximity to others early in the study predicted the effort they exerted in a subsequent cooperative task, suggesting that submergence in a crowd may predict social loafing. We conclude that in vivo behavioral tracking is a uniquely powerful new tool for answering longstanding, fundamental questions about group dynamics.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149880
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