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Knowledge Games

  • kschrier
  • Sep 19, 2016
  • 1 min read

Imagine if new knowledge and insights came not just from research centers, think tanks, and universities but also from games, of all things. Video games have been viewed as causing social problems, but what if they actually helped solve them? This question drives Karen Schrier’s Knowledge Games, which seeks to uncover the potentials and pitfalls of using games to make discoveries, solve real-world problems, and better understand our world. For example, so-called knowledge games—such as Foldit, a protein-folding puzzle game, SchoolLife, which crowdsources bullying interventions, and Reverse the Odds, in which mobile game players analyze breast cancer data—are already being used by researchers to gain scientific, psychological, and humanistic insights.

Read more about Knowledge Games in the New Scientist, eLearn Magazine, and Times Higher Education.


 
 
 
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© 2016 by Karen Schrier.

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Learning, Education & Games SIG - International Game Developers Association (IGDA)

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