UsingThe Lure of Gang Lifeto Teach Interpersonal and Group Attraction

2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-51
Author(s):  
Gordon Alley-Young
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 096366252110206
Author(s):  
Lyn M. van Swol ◽  
Emma Frances Bloomfield ◽  
Chen-Ting Chang ◽  
Stephanie Willes

This study examined if creating intimacy in a group discussion is more effective toward reaching consensus about climate change than a focus on information. Participants were randomly assigned to either a group that spent the first part of an online discussion engaging in self-disclosure and focusing on shared values (intimacy condition) or discussing information from an article about climate change (information condition). Afterward, all groups were given the same instructions to try to come to group consensus on their opinions about climate change. Participants in the intimacy condition had higher ratings of social cohesion, group attraction, task interdependence, and collective engagement and lower ratings of ostracism than the information condition. Intimacy groups were more likely to reach consensus, with ostracism and the emotional tone of discussion mediating this effect. Participants were more likely to change their opinion to reflect that climate change is real in the intimacy than information condition.


2014 ◽  
Vol 281 (1788) ◽  
pp. 20140812 ◽  
Author(s):  
William L. Romey ◽  
Magenta M. Miller ◽  
Jose M. Vidal

Coordinated group motion has been studied extensively both in real systems (flocks, swarms and schools) and in simulations (self-propelled particle (SPP) models using attraction and repulsion rules). Rarely are attraction and repulsion rules manipulated, and the resulting emergent behaviours of real and simulation systems are compared. We compare swarms of sensory-deprived whirligig beetles with matching simulation models. Whirligigs live at the water's surface and coordinate their grouping using their eyes and antennae. We filmed groups of beetles in which antennae or eyes had been unilaterally obstructed and measured individual and group behaviours. We then developed and compared eight SPP simulation models. Eye-less beetles formed larger diameter resting groups than antenna-less or control groups. Antenna-less groups collided more often with each other during evasive group movements than did eye-less or control groups. Simulations of antenna-less individuals produced no difference from a control (or a slight decrease) in group diameter. Simulations of eye-less individuals produced an increase in group diameter. Our study is important in (i) differentiating between group attraction and repulsion rules, (ii) directly comparing emergent properties of real and simulated groups, and (iii) exploring a new sensory modality (surface wave detection) to coordinate group movement.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Niels Christensen ◽  
Sarah Kerper
Keyword(s):  

1994 ◽  
Vol 366 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. D. Rodgers ◽  
M. M. Santore

ABSTRACTThis work reexamines equilibrium and kinetic features of polymer brushes end-adsorbed onto solid substrates from solution, providing a new interpretation of previously-published experimental results and insight into the comparison between experiments and existing kinetic models. The study centers on an end-modified polyethylene oxide (PEO) which may adsorb to form a polymer brush on a hydrophobic polystyrene latex, and whose main backbone also exhibits an attraction for the surface. In a previous work, Gao and Ou-Yang claim a sharp pancake-to-brush transition with increasing surface coverage of the samples with the strongest end group attraction to the substrate, and only a delicate increase in the hydrodynamic thickness of layers whose chain ends are weakly attracted to the surface. Our reevaluation of this data, however, collapses all molecular architectures to a single curve describing the hydrodynamic thickness at different surface loadings, and which shows a relatively sharp transition for all samples. Gao and Ou-Yang have also performed kinetic exchange experiments where low molecular weight species replace preadsorbed high molecular species (with the same endgroup-surface adsorption energy), and observed stretched exponential behavior in the evolution of the hydrodynamic thickness of the adsorbed layer. We employed Milner's treatment for brush exchange kinetics, to extract equivalent phenomenological parameters for more direct comparison between fundamental parameters and experiment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 127-136
Author(s):  
A.V. Sidorenkov ◽  
O.Y. Shipitko

The existing approaches to understanding the attraction and methods of its study are indicated. There are three levels of attraction in a small group — interpersonal, microgroup and group attraction, each of which includes three components — subjective, communicative and activity-oriented. In accordance with this idea a questionnaire of interpersonal attraction and a questionnaire of group and micro-group attraction were developed. Each of the questionnaires includes three subscales for measuring the relevant components of the attraction. To assess the validity and reliability of the questionnaires, a survey was conducted in 18 small production groups — primary structural divisions in organizations and in small companies. The total number of respondents was 200 employees. For each questionnaire factor analysis was performed and the internal consistency of the subscales was assessed. It is shown that the questionnaires have validity and reliability. It is proved expedient to separate three subscales in each questionnaire. The main conclusions are drawn and the possibilities of using the developed tools for research and practical purposes are highlighted.


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