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1.
PLoS One ; 8(1): e52766, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23300991

ABSTRACT

Under what conditions will a bystander intervene to try to stop a violent attack by one person on another? It is generally believed that the greater the size of the crowd of bystanders, the less the chance that any of them will intervene. A complementary model is that social identity is critical as an explanatory variable. For example, when the bystander shares common social identity with the victim the probability of intervention is enhanced, other things being equal. However, it is generally not possible to study such hypotheses experimentally for practical and ethical reasons. Here we show that an experiment that depicts a violent incident at life-size in immersive virtual reality lends support to the social identity explanation. 40 male supporters of Arsenal Football Club in England were recruited for a two-factor between-groups experiment: the victim was either an Arsenal supporter or not (in-group/out-group), and looked towards the participant for help or not during the confrontation. The response variables were the numbers of verbal and physical interventions by the participant during the violent argument. The number of physical interventions had a significantly greater mean in the in-group condition compared to the out-group. The more that participants perceived that the Victim was looking to them for help the greater the number of interventions in the in-group but not in the out-group. These results are supported by standard statistical analysis of variance, with more detailed findings obtained by a symbolic regression procedure based on genetic programming. Verbal interventions made during their experience, and analysis of post-experiment interview data suggest that in-group members were more prone to confrontational intervention compared to the out-group who were more prone to make statements to try to diffuse the situation.


Subject(s)
Aggression , Helping Behavior , Violence , England , Environment , Humans , Male , Social Behavior , Social Identification
2.
IEEE Trans Cybern ; 43(3): 1131-45, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23193243

ABSTRACT

Bipedal walking is not fully understood. Motion generated from methods employed in robotics literature is stiff and is not nearly as energy efficient as what we observe in nature. In this paper, we propose validity conditions for motion adaptation from biological principles in terms of the topology of the dynamic system. This allows us to provide a closed-form solution to the problem of motion adaptation to environmental perturbations. We define both global and local controllers that improve structural and state stability, respectively. Global control is achieved by coupling the dynamic system with a neural oscillator, which preserves the periodic structure of the motion primitive and ensures stability by entrainment. A group action derived from Lie group symmetry is introduced as a local control that transforms the underlying state space while preserving certain motor invariants. We verify our method by evaluating the stability and energy consumption of a synthetic passive dynamic walker and compare this with motion data of a real walker. We also demonstrate that our method can be applied to a variety of systems.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Biological Clocks/physiology , Gait/physiology , Locomotion/physiology , Models, Biological , Oscillometry/methods , Computer Simulation , Humans
3.
IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph ; 17(6): 850-6, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20548112

ABSTRACT

A least-squares mesh is a surface representation consisting of a small set of anchor points and the differential and topological properties of the surface. In this paper, we present a novel method to identify motion-sensitive anchor points for least-squares meshes from a set of examples. We present a new method, called clustered teleconnection analysis, to identify the maximally excited points in a subset of basis vectors deduced using principal component analysis. We demonstrate by means of examples that our approach has a smaller reconstruction error and equivalent performance to the current best approaches.

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