% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded.  This means that in the presence
% of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older.
% Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or
% “biber”.

@ARTICLE{Adrian:866316,
      author       = {Adrian, Juliane and Amos, Martyn and Bode, Nikolai and
                      Boltes, Maik and Corbetta, Alessandro and Cristiani,
                      Emiliano and Daamen, Winnie and Dezecache, Guillaume and
                      Drury, John and Duives, Dorine and Fu, Zhijian and Geraerts,
                      Roland and Gwynne, Steve and Hanssen, Annemiek and Hofinger,
                      Gesine and Hopkin, Charlie and Kanters, Tinus and Kneidl,
                      Angelika and Köster, Gerta and Küpper, Mira and Lees, Mike
                      and Levine, Mark and Michalareas, Georgios and Neville,
                      Fergus and Ntontis, Evan- gelos and Reicher, Stephen and
                      Richardson, Daniel and Roggen, Daniel and Ronchi, Enrico and
                      Rutten, Philip and Schadschneider, Andreas and Seyfried,
                      Armin and Shipman, Alastair and Sieben, Anna and Spearpoint,
                      Michael and Sullivan, Gavin and Templeton, Anne and Toschi,
                      Federico and Wal, Natalie Van der and Schadewijk, Frank van
                      and Krüchten, Cornelia von and Wijermans, Nanda and Yucel,
                      Zeynep and Zanlungo, Francesco and Zuriguel, Iker},
      title        = {{A} glossary for research on human crowd dynamics},
      journal      = {Collective dynamics},
      volume       = {4},
      issn         = {2366-8539},
      reportid     = {FZJ-2019-05475},
      pages        = {13},
      year         = {2019},
      abstract     = {This article presents a glossary of terms that are
                      frequently used in research on human crowds. This topic is
                      inherently multidisciplinary as it includes work in and
                      across computer science, engineering, mathematics, physics,
                      psychology and social science, for example. We do not view
                      the glossary presented here as a collection of finalised and
                      formal definitions. Instead, we suggest it is a snapshot of
                      current views and the starting point of an ongoing process
                      that we hope will be useful in providing some guidance on
                      the use of terminology to develop a mutual understanding
                      across disciplines. The glossary was developed
                      collaboratively during a multidisciplinary meeting. We
                      deliberately allow several definitions of terms, to reflect
                      the confluence of disciplines in the field. This also
                      reflects the fact not all contributors necessarily agree
                      with all definitions in this glossary.},
      cin          = {IAS-7},
      ddc          = {380},
      cid          = {I:(DE-Juel1)IAS-7-20180321},
      pnm          = {511 - Computational Science and Mathematical Methods
                      (POF3-511) / PhD no Grant - Doktorand ohne besondere
                      Förderung (PHD-NO-GRANT-20170405)},
      pid          = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-511 / G:(DE-Juel1)PHD-NO-GRANT-20170405},
      typ          = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
      doi          = {10.17815/CD.2019.19},
      url          = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/866316},
}