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Michelle A. Hoyle

The Future of Gaming: a Portrait of the New Gamers | Latitude Research° - 0 views

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    The study offers 3 key insights into the evolution of gaming (explained in more detail below): Games go beyond the screen Life becomes play Social matures into societal The study included a Web survey amongst 290 smartphone owners between the ages of 15-54 who self-identified as at least "casual gamers," with nearly half labeling themselves "game enthusiasts."* The survey assessed technology usage and future orientation, attitudes and behaviors around gaming, and possible interest areas for new game experiences.
Jody Smith

WoW Gold Price research: A World of Warcraft Gold study. - 0 views

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    "Together with some students from the University of Sheffield, we've done some research into World of Warcraft Gold USA, and what that tells us about the realm-by-realm economies of the European and American servers. What came out of the study was astonishing- and seems to indicate a phenomenal bias on behalf of Blizzard towards their American clients."
Jody Smith

The Wired Campus - Professor Given $100,000 to Study World of Warcraft - The Chronicle ... - 0 views

shared by Jody Smith on 07 Oct 09 - Cached
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    A researcher at University of California at Irvine got $100,000 from the National Science Foundation to study how Americans play the popular online game World of Warcraft
Jody Smith

Leveraging virtual omniscience: mixed methodologies for studying social life in persist... - 0 views

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    "Massively multiplayer online worlds (e.g., EverQuest or SecondLife) constitute a new form of social life that is ripe for social scientific study. Inhabitants of persistent virtual environments spend on average more than twenty hours per week logged on."
Michelle A. Hoyle

Welfare Epics? The Rhetoric of Rewards in World of Warcraft -- Paul 5 (2): 158 -- Games... - 0 views

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    "After the Lead Content Designer of World of Warcraft (WoW), Tigole, deemed a new set of rewards ''welfare'' epics, the WoW player community responded in a multitude of fascinating ways. Using rhetorical analysis, gaming studies literature, and a critical analysis of welfare discourse, four rhetorical strategies can be seen in the discourse produced by the playing community. From directly confronting Tigole's statements to lamenting a loss of avatar capital and analyzing the role the changes have on the multiplayer aspects of the game, the rhetoric of ''welfare'' epics offers unique insights into the importance of balance and scarcity in the normative structures of WoW, how players accept and perpetuate the belief that rewards in online games should be ''earned,'' and how WoW's system of rewards has been fundamentally altered since the game's launch."
Michelle A. Hoyle

Sociologists invade World of Warcraft, see humanity's future - 0 views

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    "In their continued quest to plumb the mysterious depths of human interactions, some sociologists have stopped watching people-and started watching their avatars. And the US government is paying them to do it. While playing World of Warcraft and traipsing through Second Life might not sound like traditional academic disciplines, they are increasingly important for research into virtual communities. This burgeoning subdiscipline even has its own publication, the Journal of Virtual Worlds Research. What gets studied? Gold farming, "goon culture," griefing, entrepreneurial activity, intimacy, even "The Visual Language of Virtual BDSM Photographs in Second Life," which appeared in the most recent issue of the journal. "
Michelle A. Hoyle

Professors hold class in 'World of Warcraft' | ASU News | The State Press | Arizona Sta... - 0 views

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    "Instead of logging onto Blackboard to complete homework this spring, students in one class will enter the "World of Warcraft" and "Second Life" to study the culture of online virtual environments. "Discourses, Community, and Power in Virtual Worlds," or ENG 654, is open to students of all majors and interests. The course intends to adapt to an increasingly technological environment. "We want them to get the experience of playing together with different characters that have to take on different roles to really get an experiential sense of how complex game play is in that environment," said English professor Elisabeth Hayes, who will teach the class with law professor John McKnight. The class will meet in a physical classroom for half of its sessions and the rest will be held virtually in "World of Warcraft" and "Second Life.""
Jody Smith

the DAEDALUS PROJECT: MMORPG Research, Cyberculture, MMORPG Psychology - 0 views

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    "The Daedalus Project was a long-running survey study of MMO players"
Jody Smith

Terra Nova: Confessions of a Virtual Intelligence Analyst - 0 views

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    "I've spent much of the last year collecting and helping to analyze data scraped from World of Warcraft as part of the largest quantitative study of virtual worlds to date."
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