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Several variables help to explain why the bystander effect occurs.
This is explained by both bystander effect and diffusion of responsibility.
The bystander effect is not a generic consequence of increasing group size.
That leads everyone to wait for someone else to jump in first - which is the bystander effect."
The bystander effect is a social psychological phenomenon that refers to cases in which individuals do not offer help to a victim.
Research suggests that the bystander effect may be present in computer-mediated communication situations.
This is also attributed to the bystander effect.
The mechanism for the bystander effect is believed to be due to cell-to-cell communication.
The Bystander Effect is the idea that the larger the crowd, the less likely one individual coming to the aid of someone becomes.
Researchers have documented the bystander effect: they found that powerful people are three times as likely to first offer help to a "stranger in distress".
The intense press coverage also led to serious investigation of the bystander effect by psychologists and sociologists.
A brutal killing led to the naming of the phenomenon known as Bystander Effect.
Experiments performed at microbeam facilities have since shown the existence of a bystander effect.
A study (2006) tested bystander effect in emergency situations to see if they would get the same results from other studies testing non-emergencies.
This practitioners' study suggests that the "bystander effect" can be studied and analyzed in a much broader fashion.
The bystander effect is therefore important to consider in diseased cells which opened an avenue for more funding and a flourish of research.
According to the bystander effect, the more people witnessing a dangerous event, the fewer people are likely to respond to help.
General bystander effect research was mainly conducted in the context of non-dangerous, non-violent emergencies.
Dr. Weiner has dubbed this spread-out protection a "bystander effect."
Brooks talks about the "bystander effect."
The case of Kitty Genovese is often cited as an example of the "bystander effect".
The social phenomena of the bystander effect and diffusion of responsibility heavily relate to the volunteer's dilemma.
Gap junctions and the "bystander effect"
This practitioners' study suggests that the so-called bystander effect is actually very complex, reflecting views of the context (and organization) and many personal reasons.
He reasoned, the immune system would be able to play a factor via a 'bystander effect' in eradicating chemotherapy-resistant cancer cells.