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By­s­tan­der Effect

TagLast edit: 26 Nov 2021 14:05 UTC by Multicore

The bystander effect is a social psychological phenomenon in which individuals are less likely to offer help in an emergency situation when other people are present. The probability of help is inversely proportional to the number of bystanders. In other words, the greater the number of bystanders, the less likely it is that any one of them will help.

—Safety Canada, January 2004, “Don’t Just Stand There—Do Something”

See also

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Rob Bensinger17 Mar 2021 7:04 UTC
282 points
46 comments11 min readLW link1 review

Notes on Care

David Gross5 Dec 2020 16:33 UTC
8 points
0 comments7 min readLW link

[Question] By­s­tan­der effect false?

Ben Pace12 Jul 2019 6:30 UTC
16 points
4 comments1 min readLW link

28 so­cial psy­chol­ogy stud­ies from *Ex­per­i­ments With Peo­ple* (Frey & Gregg, 2017)

Yuxi_Liu16 Jun 2019 2:23 UTC
12 points
1 comment26 min readLW link

Hero Licensing

Eliezer Yudkowsky21 Nov 2017 21:13 UTC
234 points
83 comments52 min readLW link

There’s No Fire Alarm for Ar­tifi­cial Gen­eral Intelligence

Eliezer Yudkowsky13 Oct 2017 21:38 UTC
142 points
72 comments25 min readLW link

To In­spire Peo­ple to Give, Be Public About Your Giving

Peter Wildeford17 May 2013 6:58 UTC
24 points
15 comments6 min readLW link

[SEQ RERUN] Col­lec­tive Apa­thy and the Internet

MinibearRex1 May 2013 4:33 UTC
6 points
0 comments1 min readLW link

[SEQ RERUN] By­s­tan­der Apathy

MinibearRex30 Apr 2013 5:00 UTC
8 points
0 comments1 min readLW link

Evolu­tion, bias and global risk

Giles23 May 2011 0:32 UTC
5 points
10 comments5 min readLW link

Col­lec­tive Apa­thy and the Internet

Eliezer Yudkowsky14 Apr 2009 0:02 UTC
49 points
34 comments2 min readLW link

By­s­tan­der Apathy

Eliezer Yudkowsky13 Apr 2009 1:26 UTC
45 points
20 comments3 min readLW link

Be­ware the Unsurprised

Eliezer Yudkowsky3 May 2007 22:45 UTC
39 points
3 comments2 min readLW link
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