Journal Article FZJ-2022-02088

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An attempt to distinguish physical and socio-psychological influences on pedestrian bottleneck

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2022
Royal Soc. Publ. London

Royal Society Open Science 9, 211822 () [10.1098/rsos.211822]

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Abstract: The relevance of social psychology for the properties of pedestrian streams is still discussed controversially. Although physics-based models appear to capture many properties rather accurately it was argued that certain emergent phenomena cannot be explained by simple systems of self-driven particles. It has turned out be a difficult task to clearly distinguish social psychological effects from physical effects in pedestrian crowds. In particular, results from a recent empirical study of pedestrian flow at bottlenecks have been interpreted as an indication for the relevance of social psychology even in rather simple scenarios of crowd dynamics. The study showed a surprising dependence of the density near the bottleneck on the width of the corridor leading to it. The density was found to increase with increasing corridor width, although a wider corridor provides more space for the pedestrians. It has been argued that this observation is a consequence of social norms which trigger the effect by a preference for queuing in such situations. However, convincing evidence for this hypothesis is still missing. Here we reconsider this scenario from a physics perspective using computer simulations of a simple microscopic velocity-based model with minimal social psychological influence.

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Note: The raw trajectory files of the simulations are available on the Zenodo open-access repository, 10.5281/zenodo.4467781. The source code with an implementation of the model described and the analysis scripts can be downloaded from https://github.com/JonasRzez/jpsnewnoise.git

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Zivile Sicherheitsforschung (IAS-7)
Research Program(s):
  1. 5111 - Domain-Specific Simulation & Data Life Cycle Labs (SDLs) and Research Groups (POF4-511) (POF4-511)
  2. Numerical investigation of the Jallianwala Bagh's events (1919) (jias70_20191101) (jias70_20191101)
  3. SISAME - SImulations for SAfety at Major Events (HGF-DB001687) (HGF-DB001687)

Appears in the scientific report 2022
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 Record created 2022-05-05, last modified 2023-01-23


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2020_Analysis_of_bottleneck_flow_under_varying_spatial_geometries_using_a_continuous_model - Download fulltext PDF
rsos.211822 - Download fulltext PDF
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