Abstract
Over time, numerous studies have been conducted on pedestrian behaviour to improve the fidelity of pedestrian models considering pedestrians as individual entities. The participation of social groups is much higher than individuals in mass religious gatherings, which calls for studies focusing on understanding group behaviour in a crowd. Data was collected at two different settings (a) in Kumbh Mela 2016 representing mass religious gatherings and (b) Open day event held at Indian Institute of Science campus representing a regular urban setting. Trajectories of groups were extracted, and spatial formation of different group sizes were plotted. It was observed that group size 3 formed a linear or V-pattern and groups size 4 and 5 formed asymmetric irregular polygons. The area occupancy of groups and their average walking speeds were also calculated for both datasets, and it was observed that despite Kumbh Mela groups occupying lesser area, the average walking speed is higher than the groups in Open day. Looking at these group behaviour characteristics, this paper tries to uncover how group behaviour in mass religious gatherings is different from a low or moderate density setting and whether or not, there is a need for separate walking behaviour parameters.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
References
James, J.: The distribution of freely-forming Small Group Size, American Sociological Review, Vol. 18, No. 5, pp. 569–570 (1991).
Aveni, A.: The Not-So-Lonely Crowd: Friendship Groups in Collective Behaviour. Sociometry, 40(1), 96–99 (1977).
Gayathri, H., Aparna, P.M., Verma, A.: A review of studies on understanding crowd dynamics in the context of crowd disasters in mass religious gatherings. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 25, 82–91 (2017).
Singh, H., Arter, R., Dodd, L., Langston, P., Lester, E., Drury, J.: (2009) Modelling subgroup behaviour in crowd dynamics DEM simulation. Appl. Math. Model. 33 (12) 4408–4423 (2009).
Cheng, L., Yarlagadda, R., Clinton, B F., Yarlagadda, K.P.: A review of pedestrian group dynamics and methodologies in modelling pedestrian group behaviours. World Journal of Mechanical Engineering, 1(1), 002–013 (2014).
Moussaïd, M., Perozo, N., Garnier, S., Helbing, D., Theraulaz, G.: The walking behaviour of pedestrian social groups and its impact on crowd dynamics. PloS one, 5(4), e10047 (2010).
Schultz, M.: An individual-based model for passenger movement behaviour in airport terminals. PhD thesis. Technische Universität Dresden (2010).
Gorrini, A., Bandini, S., Vizzari, G.: Empirical investigation on pedestrian crowd dynamics and grouping. In Traffic and Granular Flow'13 (pp. 83–91). Springer, Cham (2015).
Miguel, A.F.: Key mechanisms behind pedestrian dynamics: individual and collective patterns of motion. In Diffusion Foundations (Vol. 3, pp. 153–164). Trans Tech Publications (2015).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2024 The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.
About this paper
Cite this paper
Subramanian, G.H., Rai, A., Verma, A. (2024). Understanding the Difference in Social Group Behaviour of a Spiritually Motivated Crowd and a General Crowd. In: Rao, K.R., Seyfried , A., Schadschneider, A. (eds) Traffic and Granular Flow '22 . TGF 2022. Lecture Notes in Civil Engineering, vol 443. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-7976-9_8
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-7976-9_8
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Singapore
Print ISBN: 978-981-99-7975-2
Online ISBN: 978-981-99-7976-9
eBook Packages: EngineeringEngineering (R0)