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Serious game

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A serious game or applied game is a game designed for a primary purpose other than pure entertainment.[1] The "serious" adjective is generally prepended to refer to video games used by industries like defense, education, scientific exploration, health care, emergency management, city planning, engineering, politics and art.[2] Serious games are a subgenre of serious storytelling, where storytelling is applied "outside the context of entertainment, where the narration progresses as a sequence of patterns impressive in quality ... and is part of a thoughtful progress".[3] The idea shares aspects with simulation generally, including flight simulation and medical simulation, but explicitly emphasizes the added pedagogical value of fun and competition.[citation needed]

History

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The use of games in educational circles has been practiced since at least the twentieth century. For example, Lizzie Magie created a game called The Landlord's Game, a predecessor of Monopoly, in 1903.

Use of paper-based educational games became popular in the 1960s and 1970s, but waned under the Back to Basics teaching movement.[4] (The Back to Basics teaching movement is a change in teaching style that started in the 1970s after student scores declined on standardized tests and students were alleged to be exploring too many electives. This movement wanted to focus students on reading, writing and arithmetic and intensify the curriculum.)[5] Clark C. Abt is credited for coining the term "serious games" in the 1970s, defined as games that have an "explicit and carefully thought-out educational purpose and are not intended to be played primarily for amusement." Abt also recognized that this "does not mean that serious games are not, or should not be, entertaining."[6]

The early 2000s saw a surge in different types of educational games, especially those designed for the younger learner. Many of these games were not computer-based but took on the model of other traditional gaming systems both in the console and hand-held formats. In 1999, LeapFrog Enterprises introduced the LeapPad, which combined an interactive book with a cartridge and allowed kids to play games and interact with a paper-based book. Based on the popularity of traditional hand-held gaming systems like Nintendo's Game Boy, they also introduced their hand-held gaming system called the Leapster in 2003. This system was cartridge-based and integrated arcade–style games with educational content.[7]

Also in the 2000s, educational games saw an expanse into sustainable development with titles such as Learning Sustainable Development in 2000 and Climate Challenge in 2006.[8]

Other directions for serious video games beyond education began to emerge in the early 2000s, with America's Army in 2002 as an early example. The game was a first-person shooter developed by the United States Army as a recruitment tool, and later used as an early training tool for new recruits.[9]

Coventry University Serious Games Institute

By 2010, serious games had evolved to incorporate actual economies[citation needed] like Second Life, in which users can create actual businesses that provide virtual commodities and services for Linden dollars, which are exchangeable for US currency. In 2015, Project Discovery was launched as a serious game. Project Discovery was launched as a vehicle by which geneticists and astronomers with the University of Geneva could access the cataloging efforts of the gaming public via a mini-game contained within the Eve Online massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG). Players acting as citizen scientists categorize and assess actual genetic samples or astronomical data. This data was then utilized and warehoused by researchers. Any data flagged as atypical was further investigated by scientists.

Applications

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Adult education

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Real simulations and simulation games provide the user with the opportunity to gain experience. Actions generated from knowledge can be tested here according to the trial and error principle. Theoretical knowledge can either be acquired beforehand or imparted during the game, which can then be tested in a virtual practice. There is an educational policy interest in the professionalisation of such offers. With the research project NetEnquiry, the Federal Ministry of Education and Research supports a corresponding research project for education and training, implemented here with the focus on mobile learning.[10] In addition, there is an increasing incorporation of serious games within university curricula which students can use to consolidate learning or enhance knowledge.[11]

The News Game, with 100 headlines and stories, you guess if real or fake news, testing deduction and current affairs knowledge.[12][13][14][15]

Art games

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An art game uses the medium of computer games to create interactive and multimedia art. For the first time, the term was described scientifically in 2002 to emphasize games that attach more importance to art than to game mechanics. Mostly they convince by a special aesthetics and atmosphere and use the interactivity for creativity and the thought stimulation of the player. Art created by or through computer games are also called art games.[16][17]

Exercise therapy

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These include serious games that animate the player to sport and movement. For example, hand-eye coordination and upper body muscles can be trained using Wii Sports, regardless of age and physical disabilities, alone or with others. Even simple Jump-'n'-Run games can have an educational purpose, depending on the user. They are partly used in rehabilitation therapies to restore the user's finger mobility, reaction speed and eye-finger coordination.[18]

Health

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On the one hand, the health sector includes digital games for the professional area of doctor training, e.g. to train an operation or to impart specialist knowledge, and on the other hand they address the private end user who uses them, for example, as motivation tools for a healthier lifestyle, nutrition or for rehabilitation purposes. In addition, Serious Games can be used as a training measure for patients who acquire knowledge about their clinical pictures and possible therapy options.[citation needed] There is also an increasing use of serious games in health education programs.[19]

On 15 June 2020, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first video game treatment, a game for children aged 8–12 with certain types of ADHD called EndeavorRx. It can be downloaded with a prescription onto a mobile device, and is intended for use in tandem with other treatments. Patients play it for 30 minutes a day, 5 days a week, over a month-long treatment plan.[20]

Intelligence

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Board games have been used to train employees of intelligence agencies. For example, the Sherman Kent School for Intelligence Analysis, an arm of the Central Intelligence Agency, uses Kingpin: The Hunt for El Chapo, a two-player game where one player represents drug trafficker Joaquín Guzmán and his cartel while the other one plays as law enforcement agencies who aim to capture Guzmán. During a lesson, students play the game twice, once as law enforcement, once as the cartel, and the instructor periodically gives each player useful information. Due to time constraints, the games the CIA uses are not always designed to played in their entirety. Instead, the goal is to teach the prospective analysts how to figure out which information is useful and when to act on it.[21]

Military games

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Games like America's Army are training simulations that are used in the training and recruitment of soldiers. The games try to represent warfare as realistically as possible in order to familiarize users with the dangers, strategies, weapons, tactics and vehicles. [citation needed]

Politics, culture and advertising

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OpenTTD, a game that simulates running a railroad business

Persuasive games are developed for advertisers, policy makers, news organizations and cultural institutions. They are politically and socially motivated games that serve social communication. They cover areas such as politics, religion, environment, urban planning and tourism. The aim is to lead to create a demand for product due to a generated positive exposure to the product in the game or introduce new ways of thinking through experience. [citation needed]

Product creation games

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The aim here is to give the user an understanding of a company's products. The user can test the products in a simulation under real conditions and convince themselves of their functionality. Technical basics, handling and security risks can be taught to the user.

Recruitment games

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This type of serious games is intended to bring the user closer to tasks that would otherwise be less in the limelight. Companies try to present and profile themselves through such games in order to attract apprentices and applicants. Future tasks will be presented and carried out in a large context, for example "TechForce", in which various technical areas are combined into an end product with the aim of winning a race.

Scientific tool

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In 2021, Heather R. Campbell, a graduate student at the University of Kentucky, published her doctoral dissertation, Towards a Holistic Risk Model For Safeguarding the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain: Capturing the Human-Induced Risk to Drug Quality.[22] In this work, Campbell developed a virtual pharmaceutical manufacturing plant and used the flexibility of video games to develop various real-life scenarios. The scenarios were then played by humans under different motivating objectives through a series of experiments. The results allowed Campbell to gather useful information on what might be the next threat to the pharmaceutical supply chain. The results showed promise for video games' future as a scientific data collection tool and was featured in a Bloomberg Prognosis Article.[23]

Security

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Serious games in the field of security are aimed at disaster control, the defense sector and recruitment. Public, private and municipal institutions, such as fire brigades, police, Federal Agency for Technical Relief (Technisches Hilfswerk - Germany THW), DRK as well as crisis centres and NGOs benefit from them. Scenarios such as natural disasters, acts of terrorism, danger prevention and emergency care are simulated. Challenges such as acting under time and pressure to succeed can thus be realistically tested with fewer resources and costs. This area formed the second focal point. An example of serious games from this sector is the Emergency game series or the possibility to explore the response of communities in a game in disaster management. Psychological effect that exist in real life-threatening situation are not realistic in a serious game but the training in a serious game and exposure to the requirements and constraints in disaster management can prepare to a better response of the teams in a real disaster management case and lead to an improved risk mitigation strategies.[citation needed]

Youth education

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The user is given tasks and missions that they can only solve with the knowledge that they will gradually discover during the game. The theoretical aspects of the game are always taught in small quantities at the right time to be able to solve the next task and thus test the theoretical approaches in practice.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Djaouti, Damien; Alvarez, Julian; Jessel, Jean-Pierre. "Classifying Serious Games: the G/P/S model" (PDF). Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  2. ^ "Serious Games". cs.gmu.edu. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  3. ^ Lugmayr, Artur; Suhonen, Jarkko; Hlavacs, Helmut; Montero, Calkin; Suutinen, Erkki; Sedano, Carolina (2016). "Serious storytelling - a first definition and review". Multimedia Tools and Applications. 76 (14): 15707–15733. doi:10.1007/s11042-016-3865-5. S2CID 207219982.
  4. ^ Rice, J. W. (2007). "Assessing higher order thinking in video games" (PDF). Journal of Technology and Teacher Education. 15 (1): 87.
  5. ^ "Education Update"; Back To Basics; Dr. Carole G. Hankin and Randi T. Sachs; 2002
  6. ^ Djaouti, Damien; Alvarez, Julian; Jessel, Jean-Pierre; Rampnoux, Olivier (2011). "Origins of Serious Games" (PDF). Serious Games and Edutainment Applications. Springer. pp. 25–43. doi:10.1007/978-1-4471-2161-9_3. ISBN 978-1-4471-2160-2.
  7. ^ Gray, J. H.; Bulat, J.; Jaynes, C.; Cunningham, A. (2009). "LeapFrog learning". Mobile Technology for Children: Designing for Interaction and Learning. By A. Druin. Morgan Kaufmann. p. 171. ISBN 9780080954097.
  8. ^ Katsaliaki, Korina; Mustafee, Navonil (2012-12-09). "A survey of serious games on sustainable development". Wsc '12. Winter Simulation Conference. pp. 136:1–136:13.
  9. ^ Zyda, Michael (2005). "From visual simulation to virtual reality to games". Computer. 38 (9): 25–32. doi:10.1109/MC.2005.297. S2CID 19105209.
  10. ^ project page Netenquiry. Website of the project coordinator cevet - centre for vocational education and training. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  11. ^ Moro, Christian; Phelps, Charlotte; Stromberga, Zane (2020-08-14). "Utilizing serious games for physiology and anatomy learning and revision". Advances in Physiology Education. 44 (3): 505–507. doi:10.1152/advan.00074.2020. ISSN 1043-4046. PMID 32795126.
  12. ^ "The News Game". I Want One Of Those. Archived from the original on 2022-05-17. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  13. ^ "The News Game Political Edition". SOWIA. 14 December 2022. Archived from the original on 2022-12-14. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  14. ^ Parrish, James (14 September 2017). "Autumn Fair 2017". Blog. Paladone. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  15. ^ "The News Game". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  16. ^ Holmes, Tiffany. "Arcade Classics Spawn Art? Current Trends in the Art Game Genre" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-04-20. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  17. ^ Chris Schilling (2009-07-23), "Art house video games", Daily Telegraph (in German), ISSN 0307-1235, retrieved 2019-03-08
  18. ^ The Seriousness of Life.
  19. ^ Moro, Christian; Stromberga, Zane (2020). "Enhancing variety through gamified, interactive learning experiences". Medical Education. 54 (12): 1180–1181. doi:10.1111/medu.14251. ISSN 1365-2923. PMID 32438478.
  20. ^ Naomi Thomas and Amy Woodyatt (16 June 2020). "Children with ADHD can now be prescribed a video game, FDA says". CNN. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  21. ^ Hall, Charlie (22 June 2017). "The art and craft of making board games for the CIA". Polygon. Retrieved 29 August 2024.
  22. ^ Campbell, Heather R. (2021). Towards a Holistic Risk Model For Safeguarding the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain: Capturing the Human-Induced Risk to Drug Quality (PhD dissertation). University of Kentucky. doi:10.13023/etd.2021.374.
  23. ^ Edney, Anna (7 November 2021). "A Video Game Only A Pharmacist Could Love Ferrets Out Drug Fraud: Health professionals build a tool inspired from war-gaming technology to predict drug company behavior". Bloomberg.

Further reading

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