Bystander Intervention Paradigm
The bystander intervention paradigm, pioneered by Latane and Darley in 1968, experimentally demonstrates the bystander effect: the counterintuitive finding that individuals are less likely to help in an emergency when other people are present. In their classic studies a participant encounters a staged emergency -- smoke filling a room, a person apparently having a seizure, or a fall -- either alone or in the company of others (sometimes passive confederates). The dependent measures are whether and how quickly the participant intervenes. Helping reliably declines, and slows, as the number of bystanders increases, an effect Latane and Darley explained through diffusion of responsibility, pluralistic ignorance, and audience inhibition. They formalized the path to helping as a sequence of decisions, each of which the presence of others can derail. The paradigm reshaped understanding of prosocial behavior and emergency response.
Lexoni metodën e plotë
Hyni me një llogari falas për ta lexuar këtë seksion.
Harta e metodave
Lagjja e metodave të lidhura — zgjidhni një nyje për të eksploruar.
Burimet
- Latane, B., & Darley, J. M. (1968). Group inhibition of bystander intervention in emergencies. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 10(3), 215-221. DOI: 10.1037/h0026570 ↗
Si ta citoni këtë faqe
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Bystander Intervention (Bystander Effect) Paradigm. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/sq/social-psychology/bystander-intervention-paradigm
Cila metodë?
Vendoseni këtë metodë pranë të afërmeve të saj më të ngushta dhe lexojini krah për krah — biblioteka i shtron librat mbi tryezë; zgjedhja është e juaja.
- Asch Conformity ParadigmPsikologjia sociale↔ krahaso
- Confederate ParadigmPsikologjia sociale↔ krahaso
- Cover Story DeceptionPsikologjia sociale↔ krahaso
Cituar nga
Metoda të ngjashme
Vutë re një problem në këtë faqe? Raportojeni ose sugjeroni një korrigjim →