Dr Faria said he hoped the study might encourage people to think twice before blindly following others onto the road, and said it also adds to our understanding of herding, flocking and shoaling behaviors.
- Pedestrians follow the herd instinct when crossing the road, PhysOrg.com, November 16, 2010.
3. The title this week might make you wonder a little, but I’ve been watching the news on TV lately and reading the morning paper and our weekly paper, and all I hear and see is what I’d like to call, “herd behavior”. You see and hear about all the people being arrested and sent to jail or to prison and usually the offense happened because they were in a group (herd). What do I mean by herd? Well, I read an illustration once about sheep being led to slaughter at a packing house. Huddled in pens outside the slaughterhouse were hundreds of nervous sheep. They seemed to sense that there was danger around but they weren’t sure from where the danger was coming. Sheep are not known to be real smart, that’s why they need a shepherd to guide them and protect them.
SA gate is then opened that leads up a ramp and through a door to the right. However, in order to get the sheep to walk up that ramp the handlers use what they call a “Judas goat”. One wonders where that name came from? The “Judas goat” is trained to lead the sheep into the slaughterhouse. These goats are very efficient at leading the sheep to their demise. He confidently walks to the bottom of the ramp and looks back at the sheep, takes a few more steps and looks back again. The sheep look around, still a little afraid, but then they start following the “Judas goat” up the ramp to their destruction. Eventually, they follow the goat to the top where he turns left through a little gate, and the sheep are forced to turn to the right and to their death.
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