Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Black or White: Making Moral Choices in Video Games


This article argues that the emergence of morality is one of the most important innovations in video games recently. It argues that often moral choices within games are ‘black and white’ for example, good or evil choices, rather than more morally ambiguous choices, a shade of grey. It also concludes that games such as Bioshock and inFamous “give the illusion of meaning to a player’s actions” and that these choices made are “promoted as a very weighty and important player decision, when in reality it has little bearing on your character”
This article is interesting in my research because I feel the use of moral choices in game design are an interesting innovation where a player can question what they are doing within a virtual environment. The concept of morality systems in games could be an interesting base for this research.

Friday, 25 November 2011

A Virtual Reprise of the Stanley Milgram Obedience Experiments


During the 1960s Stanly Milgram submitted an article called ‘Behavioural Study of Obedience’. Influenced by the trial of Nazi lieutenant colonel Adolf Eichmann the study contained research on how participants dealt with being coerced by an authoritative figure into acting against their judgement and committing acts of torture upon another human. The participants were asked to administer increasing voltage shocks to a ‘learner’ (who unknown to the participant is an actor) when questions were answered incorrectly. The learner is placed in another room and communication between the participant and ‘learner’ is conducted over intercom. The results of the experiment are shocking with 37 of the 40 participants administering the highest range of lethal voltage shock of 450 volts. Milgram concluded that we do as we are told when ordered by an authorities figure either out of fear or out of the desire to co-operate.
This paper conducts the same tests as the Milgram experiments but within “an immersive virtual environment”. Instead of an actor playing the role of the ‘learner’ the participents have to administer shocks to a virtual female human. The results show that despite the fact that all the participants are clearly aware of the shocks not being real and having no effect on a sentient life form, all the participants showed physiological and behavioural levels as if the situation was real. “This result reopens the door to direct empirical studies of obedience and related extreme social situations, an area of research that is otherwise not open to experimental study for ethical reasons, through the employment of virtual environments.


Link: http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0000039

Friday, 18 November 2011

The Stanley Parable



The Stanley parable is a half-life 2 mod created in the source engine. The game sees you take control of Stanley, as he is narrated around his place of work. While exploring the environments of the Stanley Parable the narrator subtlety tells you what to do, for example, when you come to a corridor the narrator says 'Stanley went through the door on the left' or just before reaching a set of the stairs the narrator says 'Stanley went upstairs to his bosses office'. The interesting part to this mod is when you disobey what the narrator tells you what to do. Instead of the game coming to a stand still until they do what they are told by the narrator, the game continues, which leads to multiple paths and endings. The Stanley Parable challenges what choice and obedience mean in games. I hope to take inspiration from The Stanley Parable in creating a technical demonstration using the Unity Engine which I hope will give me supporting research. For the technical demonstration I would like to prove whether if subtly hinted, players will disobey authority from a virtual character.

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Azimov

During the summer after completing my degree I began working on a 3D platform-puzzle game in a small team using the Unity engine. My involvement in the project is level designer and environment artist. I have also played a role in the early design stages of the game. Azimov is set on a planet that is inhabited by robots. The player controls a small robot who must traverse through levels by climbing onto other larger robots, hacking into their systems and taking control of their bodies. Different enemy types have different abilities which can be utilized to solve puzzles.

Stanly Milgram - Obedience to Authority Experiments

This Article Explains the methodology and experiments conducted by Stanley Milgram on his Obedience to Authority experiments.

http://cnr.berkeley.edu/ucce50/ag-labor/7article/article35.htm