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What is Bystander Effect

Organizational Behavior Challenges in the Tourism Industry
A socio-psychological term stating that the more witnesses around, the less intervenors there are in the event of help-requiring emergency.
Published in Chapter:
#Bystandereffect: A Perspective of Tourism Businesses
Gaye Deniz (Nevsehir Haci Bektas Veli University, Turkey) and Sule Aydin (Nevsehir Haci Bektas Veli University, Turkey)
Copyright: © 2020 |Pages: 22
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-1474-0.ch006
Abstract
The term “bystander effect” has been a phenomenon in every part of life since the day on which it was first put forward. Having been initially a subject of study in the area of social psychology, the term has penetrated into the area of organizational behavior and its importance in terms of the business has begun to be understood; therefore, a detailed analysis of the related literature is presented in this section. Within this scope, history of bystander effect, its definition, and how it has been conceptualized are stated; its types and roles are explained by defining the term “bystander.” How bystander intervention progresses and what causes bystander effect are stated. Finally, how bystander effect is on businesses in terms of organizational behavior is discussed, and a number of solutions are presented for organizations to reduce this negative effect or to turn it into a positive one by stating in which processes it occurs especially in tourism businesses.
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Photodynamic Therapy: A Systems Biology Approach
Phenomenon in which uninjured cells surrounding a dying cell also die.
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Seeing (Speaking) Through Her Eyes (Brain): Louisa's Journey
Social phenomenon where a group of people who have witnessed an injustice fail to act because each one assumes that someone else will step in, resulting in no intervention from witnesses.
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Know Thyself: The Power of Transgression to Break Barriers
Refers to the decline of helping others in the presence of other people, which has been explained primarily by situational influences on individual decision making (Hortensius & de Gelder, 2018).
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