Calculator Inputs
Formula Used
The calculator converts your answers into a 0–100 score using a weighted model. Each factor is scaled to a 0–10 range, then combined as a weighted average and multiplied by 10.
- Scaled factors: Crowd size (1–5) and density (1–5) are mapped to 0–10.
- Duration scaling: Minutes are compressed with a gentle log curve to reduce extreme jumps.
- Protective inversion: Familiarity, control, coping, and support reduce risk by being inverted.
Levels: Minimal (<20), Mild (20–39.9), Moderate (40–59.9), High (60–79.9), Severe (80–100).
How to Use This Calculator
- Choose a recent crowd situation or your expected upcoming one.
- Rate fear, symptoms, and escape urge from 0 to 10.
- Select crowd size and density, and enter exposure minutes.
- Rate familiarity, control, past impact, and coping confidence.
- Calculate the score, review the level, then export CSV or PDF.
Crowd fear score purpose
This calculator turns your crowd-related anxiety signals into a consistent 0–100 indicator you can review after each exposure. It combines subjective ratings and situational details so you can compare similar events over time. The output is designed for reflection, planning, and communication, not for diagnosing any condition. Use the score to identify what changes your experience, such as density, duration, or feeling trapped.
Data inputs and scaling
Core inputs use 0–10 ratings for fear intensity, physical symptoms, escape urge, familiarity, control, past impact, and coping confidence. Crowd size and density are selected on a 1–5 scale and then mapped into a 0–10 pressure range. Exposure minutes are scaled with a gentle log curve so very long sessions do not dominate. Protective factors are inverted in the model, meaning higher familiarity, control, coping, and support reduce calculated risk. For best reliability, rate the same moment in the situation, such as the peak crowd point, and avoid averaging feelings from different locations or time blocks together.
Interpreting the level bands
The calculator labels the score into bands: Minimal under 20, Mild 20–39.9, Moderate 40–59.9, High 60–79.9, and Severe 80–100. Bands help you decide the next action: maintain, step up coping, shorten exposure, add support, or seek structured help. A rising band across similar settings suggests a stronger trigger pattern, while a falling band often reflects skill growth.
Tracking change over time
Save repeated entries for comparable situations, like commuting, shopping, or events, using the same scales each time. Review the history table to spot the inputs that move most, such as escape urge or control. Export CSV for spreadsheets, trend checks, or clinician notes, and export PDF for a clear one-page summary. Small improvements are meaningful when they persist across weeks and across similar crowd conditions.
Using results responsibly
Scores can fluctuate with sleep, caffeine, health, and stress, so interpret them alongside context. If you routinely score in the High or Severe range, consider professional support for graded exposure and panic management. This tool stores entries in your browser session only; clearing history removes local records. In crisis or immediate danger, prioritize safety and contact emergency services promptly.
FAQs
What does the Crowd Fear Score represent?
It is a 0–100 indicator built from your ratings and crowd conditions. It helps you compare situations, spot triggers, and plan coping steps, but it does not diagnose.
Can I use this score as a medical assessment?
No. The score supports self-reflection and planning. If fear causes major avoidance, panic, or impairment, a licensed professional can provide assessment and treatment options.
How often should I record entries?
Record after meaningful crowd exposures or planned practice sessions. Consistent tracking across similar settings is more useful than daily logging when you have no crowd exposure.
Why do familiarity and control lower the score?
Familiar places, clear exits, and a sense of control often reduce perceived threat. The model treats these as protective factors by inverting them so higher protection decreases risk.
Where is my history stored, and is it private?
Entries are saved in your current browser session on this device. Clearing history removes them locally. Exported files are downloaded to your computer, so store them securely.
What should I do if I feel unsafe in a crowd?
Move toward an exit, find open space, and use slow breathing or grounding. Ask a trusted person for help. If you are in immediate danger or crisis, contact local emergency services.
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Fear | Symptoms | Escape | Density | Size | Minutes | Score | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grocery peak hour | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 20 | 32.6 | Mild |
| Bus terminal rush | 6 | 6 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 45 | 61.8 | High |
| Wedding hall entry | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 60 | 52.9 | Moderate |
| Outdoor market | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 30 | 24.7 | Mild |
| Concert crowd | 8 | 8 | 9 | 5 | 5 | 90 | 86.4 | Severe |
Example rows are illustrative and may not match your personal experience.
Saved History (Last 50)
No saved calculations yet. Submit the form to create entries.
If crowds trigger panic, avoidance, or strong distress, consider professional support. Evidence-based approaches include CBT and gradual exposure planning.