Darley and latane 1968 diffusion of responsibility


  • Darley and latane 1968 diffusion of responsibility
  • Darley and latane 1968 diffusion of responsibility

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  • Darley and latané bystander effect
  • Darley and latane 1968 diffusion of responsibility worksheet.

    • The bystander effect is a social psychological phenomenon where individuals are less likely to help a victim when others are present. The greater the number of bystanders, the less likely any one of them is to help.
    • Factors include diffusion of responsibility and the need to behave in correct and socially acceptable ways.
    • The most frequently cited real-life example of the bystander effect regards a young woman called Kitty Genovese, who was murdered in Queens, New York, in 1964 while several of her neighbors looked on.

      No one intervened until it was too late.

    • Latané and Darley (1970) proposed a five-step decision model of helping, during each of which bystanders can decide to do nothing:
      1. Notice the event (or in a hurry and not notice).
      2. Interpret the situation as an emergency (or assume that as others are not acting, it is not an emergency).
      3. Assume responsibility (or assume that others will do this).
      4. Know what to do (or not have the skills necessary to help).
      5. Decide to hel