Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Groupthink01:34

Groupthink

When in group settings, we are often influenced by the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors around us. Groupthink is another phenomenon of conformity where modification of the opinions of members in a group aligns with what they believe is the group consensus (Janis, 1972). In such situations, the group often takes action that individuals would not perform outside the group setting because groups make more extreme decisions than individuals do. Moreover, groupthink can hinder opposing trains of...
Bystander Effect02:09

Bystander Effect

The discussion of bullying highlights the problem of witnesses not intervening to help a victim. This is a common occurrence, as the following well-publicized event demonstrates. In 1964, in Queens, New York, a 19-year-old woman named Kitty Genovese was attacked by a person with a knife near the back entrance to her apartment building and again in the hallway inside her apartment building. When the attack occurred, she screamed for help numerous times and eventually died from her stab wounds.
Social Traps01:41

Social Traps

Social traps are negative situations where people get caught in a direction or relationship that later proves to be unpleasant, with no easy way to back out of or avoid. The concept was orignally introduced by John Platt who applied psychology to Garrett Hardin's "Tragedy of the Commons", where in New England herd owners could let their cattle graze in the common ground. This situation seems like a good idea, but an individual could have an advantage. If they owned more cows, the larger...
Deindividuation00:57

Deindividuation

Deindividuation is a form of social influence on an individual’s behavior such that the individual engages in unusual or non-normal behavior while in a group setting. Why? Because in these group settings, the individual no longer sees themselves as an individual anymore, disinhibiting their behavior and personal restraint.
The Stanford Prison Experiment03:20

The Stanford Prison Experiment

The famous and controversial Stanford Prison Experiment, conducted by social psychologist Philip Zimbardo and his colleagues at Stanford University, demonstrated the power of social roles, social norms, and scripts.
Fundamental Attribution Error01:14

Fundamental Attribution Error

According to some social psychologists, people tend to overemphasize internal factors as explanations—or attributions—for the behavior of other people. They tend to assume that the behavior of another person is a trait of that person, and to underestimate the power of the situation on the behavior of others. They tend to fail to recognize when the behavior of another is due to situational variables, and thus to the person’s state. This erroneous assumption is called the fundamental attribution...

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

The Journal: tradition and change.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2010
Same author

Issues of the day: what are they?

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2010
Same author

The new Journal-progress report.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2010
Same author

Reading for pleasure: greene and baron corvo.

British medical journal·2010
Same author

Effect of aging on the prognostic significance of ambulatory systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure in essential hypertension.

Circulation·2001
Same author

Pulse pressure and prognosis.

Heart (British Cardiac Society)·2001
Same journal

The Placebo Effect and Long History of the Habit of Belief. How a Medieval Image Reveals the Power of the Invisible.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
Same journal

For more events and to book online, please visit //www.rsm.ac.uk/events.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
Same journal

Who is responsible when AI kills?

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
Same journal

Patient-centred care: is it enough?

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
Same journal

Continuity of care beyond access: measuring resolution rather than contact.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
Same journal

Ethnic differences in specialty destinations in UK medicine: a repeated cross-sectional analysis of secondary data.

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 8, 2026

In Situ Time-dependent Dielectric Breakdown in the Transmission Electron Microscope: A Possibility to Understand the Failure Mechanism in Microelectronic Devices
09:26

In Situ Time-dependent Dielectric Breakdown in the Transmission Electron Microscope: A Possibility to Understand the Failure Mechanism in Microelectronic Devices

Published on: June 26, 2015

It couldn't happen here

J D Swales

    Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
    |October 5, 2010
    PubMed
    Summary

    No abstract available in PubMed .

    More Related Videos

    Preventing the Spread of Malaria and Dengue Fever Using Genetically Modified Mosquitoes
    17:50

    Preventing the Spread of Malaria and Dengue Fever Using Genetically Modified Mosquitoes

    Published on: July 4, 2007

    In vivo Imaging and Therapeutic Treatments in an Orthotopic Mouse Model of Ovarian Cancer
    07:46

    In vivo Imaging and Therapeutic Treatments in an Orthotopic Mouse Model of Ovarian Cancer

    Published on: August 17, 2010

    Related Experiment Videos

    Last Updated: Jun 8, 2026

    In Situ Time-dependent Dielectric Breakdown in the Transmission Electron Microscope: A Possibility to Understand the Failure Mechanism in Microelectronic Devices
    09:26

    In Situ Time-dependent Dielectric Breakdown in the Transmission Electron Microscope: A Possibility to Understand the Failure Mechanism in Microelectronic Devices

    Published on: June 26, 2015

    Preventing the Spread of Malaria and Dengue Fever Using Genetically Modified Mosquitoes
    17:50

    Preventing the Spread of Malaria and Dengue Fever Using Genetically Modified Mosquitoes

    Published on: July 4, 2007

    In vivo Imaging and Therapeutic Treatments in an Orthotopic Mouse Model of Ovarian Cancer
    07:46

    In vivo Imaging and Therapeutic Treatments in an Orthotopic Mouse Model of Ovarian Cancer

    Published on: August 17, 2010