Δευτέρα 13 Ιουνίου 2016


Globalisation in the 21st century

The Psychology Sessions: Modern trends in Psychology

 

Can density and overcrowding lead to violence?  

 

    

The inspiration for this article was last week's traffic jam in Athens, Greece because of various strikes, and a specific incident, which took place inside a packed metro car between a middle-aged woman and an old man. They were fighting over a seat!!!

During the incident, I, just, realised that our hectic lifestyle together with various socio-cultural issues such as overcrowding, and personal problems can trigger uncontrolled verbal or physical violence. 

Lately, there has been a sudden wave of violence across Europe and the USA, which, in my opinion, is the result of unsuccessful social policies applied by governments all over the world. Crucial issues such as immigration, religious or political differences, unemployment, financial difficulties, density and overpopulation are, simply, making people not being able to stand each other, especially, if you have to enter an overcrowded area e.g. a beach.

During the 1990s, high density and overcrowding became of the most important global social problems, since it was clear that, usually, individual behaviours result in social tensions.  Besides higher crime rates, traffic jams, and long supermarket lines, high density offers many benefits (Seamon and Kenrick, 1994):

  • Being part of the streaming crowds, e.g. on a New York street, diverse with foreign visitors, street musicians, finely dressed urbanites, and bands of teenagers, may be more energizing and entertaining that stressful.
  • According to Bell et al. (1990), environmental psychologists, often, distinguish between density (the number of people in a given spatial area) and crowding (the psychological experience of spatial restrictions). 
In contrast to these advantages, sociologist Edward Alsworth Ross had, already, published 'Social Psychology' in 1908 including themes such as 'the Crowd', the Mob Mind', and 'Public Opinion' where he analysed the negative effects of urbanisation and 'mob psychology'. He believed that:
  •  the irrational mob is, often, paralleled in the impulsive and unreasoned behaviour of city dwellers.
  • this type of behaviour is due in part t to the nervous strain of great cities. 
  • the borbardment of the senses by innumerable impressions tends to produce neurasthenia (similar to anxiety disorder, in contemporary terminology). 
  • sports can train individuals to inhibit their impulses
  • country life can inspire more reasonable and cautious behaviour.
  • people living in cities lose sight of 'the unyielding laws of nature'.
 


Case study (Seamon and Kenrick, 1994)

 The behavioural sink by John Calhoun (1962) 

Probably the best-known research in this area is John Calhoun's work on population density and social pathology in rats. Calhoun used a self-made apparatus for subjecting rats to an overcrowded enuironment. The apparatus was divided into four pens: The two end pens had only one entrance and fairly normal social arrangements. Those in the two central pens suffered unusual levels of density, and developed hyperaggressive, antisocial, and deviant sexual behaviours. To be more specific: Calhoun placed 32 adult rats in a 10' x 14' room divided into four separate pens. Instead of stabilizing at four colonies of 12 animals, as expected, the number of rats went up to 80 in a year. At that point, Calhun began removing surplus infants in order to observe the effects of a population density held at double what the animals would have endured in the outdoor pen.

Under these circumstances, two dominant males staked out territories in the end pens, where they maintained harems of 8 to10 females. These arrangements were similar to the social arrangements that would have developed in the wild. However, the remaining 60 animals, crammed into the two central pens, developed a group syndrome that Calhoun (1962) named the behavioural sink: a pattern of antisocial behaviour associated with high-density living. Any female in heat would be relentlessly harassed by packs of males, some of which would follow females into their nests, where they would occasionally find dead offspring. Indeed, these males tended to become cannibalistic. As for the top males, they would engage in frequent free-for-all fights, whereas the less dominant males would occasionally lose control and attack females and juveniles. 

Amazed by the results of his experiment, Calhoun realised that the social pathology of the behavioral sink is a natural consequence of crowding, which can stand for human beings as well. Likewise, people can become hyperaggressive and sexually deviant under crowded conditions.   


Further, it is obvious that the residents of large cities face a much higher likelihood of being the victims of violent crime than do the residents of rural areas. It is fairly suggested that certain factors in high-density cities can lead to anti-social behaviour: when people are crowded in, they become aggressive and begin to compete. According to Zimbardo (1970), people living in cities are more anonymous, and thus less likely to be held accountable for antisocial acts. However, controversy reigns among psychologists about whether life in the city directly contributes to antisocial behaviour, because city density does not have a simple relationship to antisocial behaviour, but large cities do have more crime (Seamon and Kenrick, 1994)

Research studies from the 1970s to 2016 have shown that living in the city is associated not only with an increase in cruel and aggressive behaviour, but, also, with a decrease in human kindness: A sad example is the violent riots that stormed Los Angeles in late April/early May 1992. Therefore, people living in large cities are more reluctant to give money to a needy beggar, or, even, help people in need. Fischer (1984), clearly, points out that as a consequence of the increased aggression and the decreased likelihood of being helped, city residents worry more about being victimised. 

Incidentally, laboratory studies of crowding suffer their own limitations (Evans and Lepore, 1992): the process that unfolds in laboratory experiments may not be valid representations of what happens in the real world. However, it is interesting to say that the combination of laboratory experiments and correlations do allow researchers to better understand people's reactions to crowding, and to conclude that the two key-solutions to the issue of overcrowding and its negative effects is increasing social support networks, and prevention. Additionally, Bell (1990) suggested that simply installing visual barriers can reduse the stress of crowding. Nowadays, although Bell's idea was taken seriously, the problem, still, remains. 

Concluding, according to Eurostat in 2011, lifecycle has remained a powerful determinant of overcrowding. Eastern Europeans aged under 18 are on average 2.5 times more likely to experience overcrowding than those aged over 65. Affordability problems of young adults, who had to delay home leaving, contributed to unrelenting overcrowding, but so did the legacy of a housing stock composed of many small dwellings. In the EU post-communist states, between 51-87% of dwellings had no more than three rooms (https://en.wikipedia.org).


References

John G. Seamon and Douglas T. Kenrick (1994), Psychology, 2nd edition. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.

https://en.wikipedia.org.

Picture Source Links 

https://nihrecord.nih.gov/newsletters/2008/07_25_2008/story1.htm,

https://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/o/overcrowding.asp,

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3171029/Wish-weren-t-British-tourists-pack-Benidorm-beaches-record-numbers-head-Spain-wake-Tunisia-terror-attacks.html.

http://nicholsoncartoons.com.au/overcrowding-in-suburbs-causes-anti-immigration.html.



Tim Voridis
 Organisational Psychologist/Consultant - Communication and Personality Specialist

'Innovation for a brighter future'.

 

 

 


The Psychology of Communication and the Media (1): 

 

 Comics and grahic novels as psychology teasers


The Psychology Sessions: Modern Trends in Psychology


Graphic novels and comics had and, still, have a huge psychological influence not only on children and teenagers, but, also, on people of all ages. Since the first mass-produced illustration, the Glasgow Looking Glass, in 1825, it was clear that comics and graphic novels could reflect in a creative and effective way current news, popular trends, personal aspirations, historical events, technological/scientific development, politics (e.g. the Cold War), interpersonal communication (e.g. human relationships), social dealings or, even, futurism and science-fiction (e.g. space travel). Further, it is important to say that they can both shape or, at least, have a certain impact on public opinion (to be fair, as long as their motives are objective). When reading a graphic novel or a comic strip, we all come face-to-face with our ambitions, dreams, fears, views and certain 'dark areas' of our personality. 

Although it's not easy to realise, initially, both are powerful media tools, which can act as psychology teasers by awakening consciousness and describing human psychology (e.g. through the use of facial expressions, gestures (i.e. non-verbal communication). Many body language experts, non-verbal and interpersonal communication researchers have stated that graphic novels and comic strips are, maybe, the most interesting 'sources' to examine and study interplay, emotions and non-verbal behaviour.


 

Obvious emotions: Graphic novel authors use facial expressions and other design elements to express emotion, reducing the need to explain how the characters are feeling (David G. Myers, 2014).
   

 

  
Below are comic and graphic strips addressing basic and important themes of  the Science of Psychology:

Personality Testing: Projective Tests

What story can you make up by looking at the picture?

 Personality: Surface Traits  

Caption: “Oh, God! Here comes little Miss perky.” 

Are surface traits more important than source traits?  

 

Analytical Psychology: Freudian Slip 


Caption: "Good morning, beheaded—uh, I mean beloved.”

 One of the most hilarious comic strips by the New Yorker concerning 'Freudian' slip of the tongue. 

 

Non-verbal communication : When body language is relentless

   

Superman is exhausted!


Psychotherapy

 
Which would be the most effective psychotherapy method for the 21st century?


Density and overcrowding  


Have you ever felt nervous or 'imprisoned" in a large crowd?


Technology and.... Communication Problems


Caption: The woman: "How was the book?" "Who died in the end?"

The man: "The battery". 


When technology fails, miscommunication begins!!! Lol! It shouldn't have to be like that. 

Human communication is beyond technological development. At least, used to be lol!.


Personality Psychology: Erich Fromm's 4 non-productive personality types


Are these the personality types of the new modern world? 

Was Fromm thinking of Generation Y or did he insist on the freedom of ideas?


'Know thyself' is one of the fundamental commands that aim at human strength and happiness (Erich Fromm). 


The 4 non-productive personality types are (Catherine Collin, 2012): 
  • The receptive type: Has no choice but to accept a role and never fight for change or betterment.
  • The exploitative type: is aggressive and self-centred, typically engaging in acts of coercion and plagiarism.
  • The hoarding type: fights to retain possessions and is,always, seeking to acquire more.
  • The marketing type: 'sells' everything, especially, its own image.
  • All 4 types have both positive and negative sides.

I hope you've enjoyed the comic and graphic strips! 

In my opinion, Positive Psychology can provide you with all the necessary 'equipment' in order to overcome any obstacle to personal happiness!!!!



References

Catherine Collin, Voula Grand, Nigel Benson, Merrin Lazyan, Joannah Ginsburg and Marcus Weeks (2012), The Psychology Book: Big Ideas Simply explained, London: Dorling Kindersley Limited.

David G. Myers and C. Nathan DeWall (2014), Psychology in everyday life, 3rd edition, New York: Worth Publishers.


Picture Sources

Daniel Cervone and Lawrence A. Pervin (2013), Personality Theory and Research, 12th edition, USA: Wiley&Sons,


David G. Myers and C. Nathan DeWall (2014), Psychology in everyday life, 3rd edition, New York: Worth Publishers,

Lee Lorenz/The New Yorker Collection/www.cartoonbank.com,

The New Yorker Collection (1983), Dana Fradon from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved,


Charles Barsotti:The New Yorker Cartoons,


Off the Mark By Mark Parisi, July 20, 2015 Via +GoComics   www.pinterest.com,


https://gr.pinterest.com/boulogne/snoopy-charles-schulz/.  



Tim Voridis
 Organisational Psychologist/Consultant - Communication and Personality Specialist

'Innovation for a brighter future'.