This seems the takeaway: ""We don't have a lot of control over how people interpret our findings," Bushman told Ars. ... Still, Bushamn suggests that the basic idea that virtual shooting can help improve real-world shooting performance shouldn't be that controversial at its core. "If you want to learn how to fly an airplane and you want to use the media to help you learn, what would be the best way: read a book about it, watch a TV program about it, or play a flight simulator video game?" he asked rhetorically. "Clearly the more interactive the media, the more you're going to learn. Does that mean by playing flight simulator you're going to be good enough to fly a real plane? I don't know, that's a relative decision, but better than if you'd watched a TV program or read a book about it, I would say.""
Abstract: "D video games are getting popular in the world with the availability of advanced graphic cards, high
processing p
ower computers, high speed internet and smart sensing devices ranging from general mouse
to Microsoft Kinect. OpenGL is a popular graphics processing framework and it is being used by many
famous 3D video game design software as the back end framework. In
this paper we present our
experience with OpenGL based C++ implementation of a 3D first person shooting game. 3D
environment building, navigating, character animation, lighting, sound and shooting is described.
Specially OpenGL based concepts are discussed
for clear understanding of the concepts."