Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-04T15:02:30.263Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

EIGHT - Travelling Facts about Crowded Rats: Rodent Experimentation and the Human Sciences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Peter Howlett
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
Mary S. Morgan
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
Get access

Summary

Introduction

It is a commonplace that the findings of laboratory experiments will come to do work outside the laboratory walls. Less often explored is how that process is actually effected – more so in the case of the social and behavioural sciences. In what follows, we will see how facts generated by one particular series of experiments with rodents came to stand as evidence for social scientists, planners, architects, environmentalists and population activists concerned with human problems. How did it happen that these specific claims were received by such a broad audience and became evidence for diverse claims? The laboratory experiments were crowding studies conducted by the animal ecologist and psychologist John B. Calhoun at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) from 1954 until 1986. They explored the detrimental effects of high population density or crowding among various strains of laboratory rats and mice. Calhoun’s first paper documenting his results – “Population Density and Social Pathology,” published in Scientific American in 1962 – rapidly became one of the most widely referenced in psychology and in studies of urban populations. It even became a source of information for the design of buildings, such as hospitals, prisons and college dormitories, by architects, planners and psychologists. Although concern with crowding was not new, as one psychologist recollected: “[I]t was a study by Calhoun with rodents that stimulated social and environmental psychologists into action” (Paulus 1988, p. 1).

However, for the sociologist Amos Hawley, this interest in Calhoun’s work within the human sciences was a “curious phenomenon” (1972, p. 522). Certainly, Calhoun had presented his rats and mice as models for man: He argued that with increased population density, social animals became overloaded by unwanted interactions. This, in turn, resulted in social disorganisation and psychological, even physiological, breakdown. He graphically illustrated a variety of behavioural pathologies that emerged: aggression, withdrawal and sexual deviance, pathologies that surely resonated with concerns surrounding human population growth and urbanisation. Nevertheless, social scientists had long been careful in circumscribing the boundary between human and animal. Indeed, the interest in Calhoun’s findings from “people who have so studiously held their work aloof from any comparison with findings of biological researches,” was, Hawley observed, “rather ironic” (1972, p. 522). In spite of common interest in the ecology of human and animal populations, relations between social and biological scientists were strained and superficial, borrowings metaphorical (Gaziano 1996). Although Gregg Mitman (1992, p. 1) describes ecology as “the borderland between the social and the biological sciences through the study of the interrelationships between and among individual organisms and their environment,” this was a border that was carefully policed. Many in the social sciences felt a great deal of distrust towards biological modes of explanation – fears that were hardly allayed by the claims of biologists such as Raymond Pearl that Malthusian problems were better studied through “lower forms of life in the laboratory, under physically and chemically controlled conditions, than from any manipulation of never quite satisfactory demographic statistics” (Pearl 1925, p. 5).

Type
Chapter
Information
How Well Do Facts Travel?
The Dissemination of Reliable Knowledge
, pp. 223 - 251
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altman, Irwin 1975 The Environment and Social BehaviorMonterey CABrooks-ColeGoogle Scholar
Altman, Irwin 1978 Baum, AndrewEpstein, Yakov M.Human Response to CrowdingHillsdale NJLaurence ErlbaumGoogle Scholar
Ardrey, Robert 1966 The Territorial ImperativeNew YorkAthenaeum PressGoogle Scholar
Ash, Mitchell G. 2005 The Uses and Usefulness of PsychologyAnnals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 600 99CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baum, AndrewDavis, Glenn E. 1980 Reducing the Stress of High-Density Living: An Architectural InterventionJournal of Personality and Social Psychology 38 471CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baum, AndrewValins, Stuart 1977 Architecture and Social Behavior: Psychological Studies of Social DensityHillsdale NJLawrence ErlbaumGoogle Scholar
Baum, A.Valins, S. 1979 Berkowitz, LeonardAdvances in Experimental Social Psychology, Volume 12New YorkAcademic PressGoogle Scholar
Boskin, Joseph 1969 Urban Racial Violence in the Twentieth CenturyLondonThe Glencoe PressGoogle Scholar
Booth, A. 1976 Urban Crowding and Its ConsequencesNew YorkPraegerGoogle Scholar
Borlaug, Norman 1999 Frederick, W.Haberman, Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951–1970SingaporeWorld Scientific PublishingGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1952 The Social Aspects of Population DynamicsJournal of Mammalogy 33 139CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1957 Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology, 1957, volume 22, Population studies: Animal ecology and demographyNew YorkCold Spring HarborGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1962 Population Density and Social PathologyScientific American 306 139Google Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1963 The Ecology and Sociology of the Norway RatBethesda MDU.S. Department of Health, Education and WelfareCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1972 The Population Crisis Leading to the Compassionate Revolution and Environmental DesignWorld Journal of Psychosynthesis 4 21Google Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1972 Disruption of Behavioral States as a Cause of AggressionNebraska Symposium on Motivation 20 183Google ScholarPubMed
Calhoun, J. B. 1973 Death Squared: The Explosive Growth and Demise of a Mouse PopulationProceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 66 80Google ScholarPubMed
Calhoun, J. B. 1973 From Mice to MenTransaction and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 41 92Google ScholarPubMed
Calhoun, J. B. 1973 What sort of box?Man-Environment Systems 3 3Google Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1976 Scientific Quest for a Path to the FuturePopuli 3 19Google Scholar
Calhoun, J. B. 1977 Klemm, W. R.Discovery Processes in Modern BiologyMelbourne FLKriegerGoogle Scholar
Cassel, J. 1972 Gutman, R.People and BuildingsNew YorkBasic BooksGoogle Scholar
Chitty, Dennis 1996 Do Lemmings Commit Suicide? Beautiful Hypotheses and Ugly FactsNew York and OxfordOxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Choldin, Harvey M. 1978 Urban Density and Social PathologyAnnual Review of Sociology 4 91CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christian, John J. 1950 The Adreno-Pituitary System and Population Cycles in MammalsJournal of Mammalogy 31 247CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christian, John J. 1961 Phenomena associated with population densityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 47 428CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cole, Lamont C. 1957 Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology, 1957, volume 22, Population studies: Animal ecology and demographyNew YorkCold Spring HarborGoogle Scholar
Connelly, Mathew 2008 Fatal MisconceptionsCambridge MAHarvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Conway, Martin 1915 The Crowd in Peace and WarLondonLongmans, Green and CompanyGoogle Scholar
Ehrlich, P. R.P. Holdren, J. 1972 Ridker, R. G.Research Reports, Vol. III: Population Resources and the EnvironmentWashington, DCCommission on Population Growth and the American FutureGoogle Scholar
Erickson, PaulGregg, Mitman 2007 Working Papers on The Nature of Evidence: How Well Do “Facts” Travel? 19/07Department of Economic History, LSEGoogle Scholar
Factor, R.Waldron, I. 1973 Contemporary Population Densities and Human HealthNature 243 381CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fischer, Claude 1978 Baum, A.Singer, J. M.Valins, S.Advances in Environmental Psychology, Volume 1, The Urban EnvironmentHillsdale NJLawrence ErlbaumGoogle Scholar
Freedman, Jonathan L. 1971 The Crowd: Maybe Not so Madding After AllPsychology Today 5 58Google Scholar
Freedman, J. L. 1972 Maize, Sara M.Population Distribution and PolicyWashington, DCGov Printing OfficeGoogle Scholar
Freedman, J. L. 1975 Crowding and BehaviorSan FranciscoW. H. FreemanGoogle Scholar
Freedman, J. L. 1979 Aiello, J. R.Baum, A.Residential Crowding and DesignNew York and LondonPlenum PressGoogle Scholar
Freedman, J. L. 1980 Cohen, M.Malpass, R. S.Klein, H. G.Biosocial Mechanisms of Population RegulationNew Haven and LondonYale University PressGoogle Scholar
Freedman, J. L.Klevansky, S.Ehrlich, Paul R. 1971 The Effect of Crowding on Human Task PerformanceJournal of Applied Social Psychology 1 7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freedman, J. L.Levy, A. S.Buchanan, R. W.Price, J. 1972 Crowding and Human AggressivenessJournal of Experimental Social Psychology 8 528CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freedman, Jonathan L.Heshka, StanleyLevy, Alan 1975 Population Density and Pathology: Is There a Relationship?Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 11 539CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freud, Sigmund 1922 Group Psychology and the Analysis of the EgoLondonHogarth PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galle, O. R.Gove, W. R.McPherson, J. M. 1972 Population Density and Pathology: What Are the Relations for Man?Science 176 23CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gaziano, Emanuel 1996 Ecological Metaphors as Scientific Boundary Work: Innovation and Authority in Interwar Sociology and BiologyAmerican Journal of Sociology 101 874CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gillis, A. R. 1974 Population Density and Social Pathology: The Case of Building Type, Social Allowance and Juvenile DelinquencySocial Forces 53 306CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, Edward T. 1966 The Hidden DimensionNew YorkDoubledayGoogle Scholar
Halpern, D. 1995 Mental Health and the Built Environment: More than Bricks and Mortar?LondonTaylor and FrancisGoogle Scholar
Hawley, Amos H. 1950 Human Ecology: A Theory of Community StructureNew YorkRonald PressGoogle Scholar
Hawley, Amos H. 1972 Population Density and the CityDemography 9 521CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Howlett, Peter 2008 Working Paper on The Nature of Evidence: How Well Do “Facts” Travel?Department of Economic History, LSEGoogle Scholar
Keiner, Christine 2005 Wartime Rat Control, Rodent Ecology, and the Rise and Fall of Chemical RodenticidesEndeavour 29 119CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keyfitz, Nathan 1966 Population Density and the Style of Social LifeBioscience 16 868CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kingsland, Sharon 1995 Modeling Nature: Episodes in the History of Population EcologyChicagoUniversity of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Le Bon, Gustave 2002 The Crowd: A Study of the Popular MindNew YorkCourier DoverGoogle Scholar
Lorenz, Konrad 1963 On AggressionNew YorkHarcourt, Brace and WorldGoogle Scholar
Lorimer, Frank 1957 Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1957, Volume 22, Population Studies: Animal Ecology and DemographyNew YorkCold Spring HarborGoogle Scholar
Loyd, Bonnie 1977 Clearing out the Rat’s NestGrowth and Change 8 54Google Scholar
Marsden, H. M. 1972 Wohlwill, J. F.Carson, D.Environment and the Social Sciences: Perspectives and ApplicationsWashington, DCAmerican Psychological AssociationGoogle Scholar
McAtee, W. L. 1936 The Malthusian Principle in NatureThe Scientific Monthly 42 444Google Scholar
McHarg, Ian L. 1964 The Place of Nature in the City of ManAnnals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 352 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHarg, Ian L. 1969 Design with NatureNew YorkNatural History PressGoogle Scholar
McPhail, Clark 1991 The Myth of the Madding CrowdHawthorne NYAldineGoogle Scholar
Michelson, W. 1970 Man and His Urban EnvironmentReading MAAddison-WesleyGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, R. E. 1971 Some Social Implications of High Density HousingAmerican Sociological Review 36 18CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, R. E. 1974 Misconceptions about Man-Made Space: In Partial Defense of High Density HousingThe Family Coordinator 23 51CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitman, G. 1992 The State of Nature: Ecology, Community, and American Social thought, 1900–1950ChicagoUniversity of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Morris, D. 1967 The Naked ApeLondonJonathan CapeGoogle Scholar
Mumford, L. 1968 The Urban ProspectNew YorkHarcourt, Brace and WorldGoogle Scholar
Park, Robert E. 1904 Masse und PublikumBernLack and GrunauGoogle Scholar
Paulus, Paul 1988 Prison Crowding: A Psychological PerspectiveNew YorkSpringer-VerlagCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearl, R. 1925 The Biology of Population GrowthBaltimoreThe Williams and Wilkins CompanyGoogle Scholar
Pick, Daniel 1995 Freud’s and the History of the CrowdHistory Workshop Journal40:39Google Scholar
Ramsden, EdmundAdams, Jon 2009 The Rodent Experiments of John B. Calhoun and Their Cultural InfluenceJournal of Social History 42 761CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ratcliffe, Herbert L. 1968 Contribution of a Zoo to an Ecology of DiseaseProceedings of the American Philosophical Society 112 235Google Scholar
Russell, J. A.Ward, L. M. 1982 Environmental PsychologyAnnual Review of Psychology 33 651CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaeffer, Marc A.Baum, AndrewB. Paulus, PaulG. Gaes, Gerald 1988 Architecturally Mediated Effects of Social Density in PrisonEnvironment and Behavior 20 3CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitt, R. C. 1963 Implications of Density in Hong KongJournal of American Institute of Planners 29 210CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitt, R. C. 1966 Density, Health, and Social DisorganizationJournal of the American Planning Association 32 38Google Scholar
Selye, H. 1936 A Syndrome Produced by Diverse Nocuous AgentsNature 138 32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selye, H. 1950 Life Stress and Bodily DiseaseBaltimoreThe Williams and Wilkins CompanyGoogle Scholar
Simmel, Georg 1950 Wolff, KurtThe Sociology of Georg SimmelNew YorkFree PressGoogle Scholar
Snyder, Robert L. 1961 Evolution and Integration of Mechanisms that Regulate Population GrowthProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 47 449CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snyder, Robert L. 1968 Steller, EliotSprague, James M.Progress in Physiological Psychology, Volume 2New York and LondonAcademic PressGoogle Scholar
Sommer, Robert 1974 Tight Spaces: Hard Architecture and How to Humanize ItEnglewood Cliffs NJPrentice HallGoogle Scholar
Southwick, C. H. 1971 The Biology and Psychology of Crowding in Man and AnimalsThe Ohio Journal of Science 71 65Google Scholar
Stokols, Daniel 1972 A Social-psychological Model of Human CrowdingJournal of the American Institute of Planners 38 72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, Hunter S. 2001 Fear and Loathing in America: The Brutal Odyssey of an Outlaw Journalist 1968–1976New YorkSimon and SchusterGoogle Scholar
Trotter, Wilfred 1919 Instincts of the Herd in Peace and WarNew YorkMacMillanGoogle Scholar
Winsborough, H. H. 1965 The Social Consequences of High Population DensityLaw and Contemporary Problems 10 120CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wirth, L. 1938 Urbanism as a Way of LifeAmerican Journal of Sociology 4 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolfe, Tom 1968 The Pump House GangNew YorkBantamGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×