Moreover, Zimbardo did not restrict his application to group situations; he also applied deindividuation theory to " suicide, murder, and interpersonal hostility ."
32.
Although they may seem very different on the surface, these groups share many traits that make them conducive to, and even contingent on, deindividuation.
33.
Being in a crowd, being in a dark room, or wearing a disguise creates anonymity and temporarily decreases self-consciousness ( see deindividuation ).
34.
By implication, a loss of accountability does not result in the disinhibited or random anti-normative behaviour of individuals that deindividuation theory is concerned with.
35.
This model attempts to make sense of a range of deindividuation effects which were derived from situational factors such as group immersion, anonymity, and reduced identifiability.
36.
SIDE researchers concluded that there is no good empirical support for the process of deindividuation, and factors that should produce deindividuation have highly variable effects on behavior.
37.
SIDE researchers concluded that there is no good empirical support for the process of deindividuation, and factors that should produce deindividuation have highly variable effects on behavior.
38.
In contemporary social psychology, deindividuation refers to a diminishing of one's sense of individuality that occurs with behavior disjointed from personal or social standards of conduct.
39.
Deindividuation can occur in as varied instances as in the police force, the military, the internet, sports teams, gangs, cults, and social organizations.
40.
He criticizes both Francophilia and Germanophilia, noting that, although competing, they each supported deindividuation : the former, through corporatism; the latter, through militarism.