Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions
As much of the world progresses towards the trend of urbanisation, it is inevitable that physical density will increase, with the number of people within fixed areas increasing. More and more people have been moving their homes, businesses, and lives towards hubs and city centres, and Singapore rema...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-514332023-05-19T05:41:38Z Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions Zheng, Benjamin Wenbin Tan, Jasmine Yan Ching Lam, Joanna Hui Yi Nanyang Business School George Christopoulos DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Consumer behavior DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Affection and emotion DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Social As much of the world progresses towards the trend of urbanisation, it is inevitable that physical density will increase, with the number of people within fixed areas increasing. More and more people have been moving their homes, businesses, and lives towards hubs and city centres, and Singapore remains no exception, with its population swelling from 3.047 million in 1990 to 5.183 million in 2011 (SingStat, 2012). The advent of globalisation and the rising number of educated people around the world also results in copious amounts of information being interchanged rapidly. This bombardment of data results in an intangible form of density that is inescapable today. How exactly the increase in physical density impacts humans, however, remains largely a mystery, with no clear links drawn between density and human emotions. With the above premise, this study aims to uncover the underlying effects of these recent trends of increasing density, on human psychology and behaviour. We found evidence that high-density stimuli have an impact on stimulating emotions, as compared to low-density stimuli. On certain emotional dimensions like Arousal, high-density stimuli had a significant link to emotional stimulation, but not so for the Pleasure or Dominance-submissiveness (emotional dimensions derived from the PAD emotional state model). These results demonstrate that there is indeed a link between physical density and human emotions and behaviour, most significantly in creating arousal in humans as density increases. We anticipate this study to be one that can possibly lead to a more in-depth global study that can explore the effects of density on emotions on more dimensions. For example, as social behaviour is a field that is so closely linked to social marketing, it is anticipated that more conclusive findings on how density affects human behaviour can help the corporate world, governments and organizations better use density to benefit themselves and society. BUSINESS 2013-04-02T09:25:33Z 2013-04-02T09:25:33Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51433 en Nanyang Technological University 79 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Consumer behavior DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Affection and emotion DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Social Zheng, Benjamin Wenbin Tan, Jasmine Yan Ching Lam, Joanna Hui Yi Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
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As much of the world progresses towards the trend of urbanisation, it is inevitable that physical density will increase, with the number of people within fixed areas increasing. More and more people have been moving their homes, businesses, and lives towards hubs and city centres, and Singapore remains no exception, with its population swelling from 3.047 million in 1990 to 5.183 million in 2011 (SingStat, 2012). The advent of globalisation and the rising number of educated people around the world also results in copious amounts of information being interchanged rapidly. This bombardment of data results in an intangible form of density that is inescapable today.
How exactly the increase in physical density impacts humans, however, remains largely a mystery, with no clear links drawn between density and human emotions. With the above premise, this study aims to uncover the underlying effects of these recent trends of increasing density, on human psychology and behaviour.
We found evidence that high-density stimuli have an impact on stimulating emotions, as compared to low-density stimuli. On certain emotional dimensions like Arousal, high-density stimuli had a significant link to emotional stimulation, but not so for the Pleasure or Dominance-submissiveness (emotional dimensions derived from the PAD emotional state model).
These results demonstrate that there is indeed a link between physical density and human emotions and behaviour, most significantly in creating arousal in humans as density increases. We anticipate this study to be one that can possibly lead to a more in-depth global study that can explore the effects of density on emotions on more dimensions. For example, as social behaviour is a field that is so closely linked to social marketing, it is anticipated that more conclusive findings on how density affects human behaviour can help the corporate world, governments and organizations better use density to benefit themselves and society. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Zheng, Benjamin Wenbin Tan, Jasmine Yan Ching Lam, Joanna Hui Yi |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Zheng, Benjamin Wenbin Tan, Jasmine Yan Ching Lam, Joanna Hui Yi |
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Zheng, Benjamin Wenbin |
title |
Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
title_short |
Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
title_full |
Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
title_fullStr |
Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
title_sort |
developing a methodological tool to study density and its effects on human emotions |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51433 |
_version_ |
1770564505239027712 |