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More About This Title Handbook of Digital Games
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MARIOS C. ANGELIDES, PhD, is a Professor of Computing in the School of Engineering and Design at Brunel University, UK, a Chartered Fellow of the British Computer Society, and a Chartered Engineer. He holds a BSc and a PhD, both from the London School of Economics (LSE).
HARRY AGIUS, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in Computing in the School of Engineering and Design at Brunel University, UK, and a Fellow of the British Computer Society. He holds a BSc in Computing and Information Systems, an MSc in Analysis, Design and Management of Information Systems, and a PhD in Multimedia Systems, all from the London School of Economics (LSE).
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Contributors ix
Introduction 1
Marios C. Angelides and Harry Agius
Part I Gaming Techniques and Tools
1. Toward the Adaptive Generation of Bespoke Game Content 17
Cameron Browne, Simon Colton, Michael Cook, Jeremy Gow, and Robin Baumgarten
2. Procedural Content Generation 62
Tom Betts
3. Content Generation in a Collaborative Browser-Based Game Environment 92
Juha-Matti Vanhatupa and Janne Lautamaki
4. Automatic Narratives in MMORPGs 111
Hao Wang
5. Collision Detection with Navigation Meshes 130
D. Hunter Hale and G. Michael Youngblood
6. Mass Population: Plausible and Practical Crowd Simulation 146
Sybren A. Stüvel, Cathy Ennis, and Arjan Egges
7. Synchronization in Multiplayer Online Games 175
Stefano Ferretti
8. Exchanging Social Information in Online Social Games 197
Fabrizio Davide, Stefano Triberti, and Francesco Collovà
9. Collaboration through Gaming 235
Damon Daylamani Zad, Marios C. Angelides, and Harry Agius
10. AI for General Strategy Game Playing 274
Jon Lau Nielsen, Benjamin Fedder Jensen, Tobias Mahlmann, Julian Togelius, and Georgios N. Yannakakis
11. Rated A for Advertising: A Critical Reflection on In-Game Advertising 305
Laura Herrewijn and Karolien Poels
Part II Game Play
12. Immersion in Digital Games: Review of Gaming Experience Research 339
Paul Cairns, Anna Cox, and A. Imran Nordin
13. Know Thy Player: An Integrated Model of Player Experience for Digital Games Research 362
Malte Elson, Johannes Breuer, and Thorsten Quandt
14. At the Core of Player Experience: Continuation Desire in Digital Games 388
Henrik Schoenau-Fog
15. Empirical Game Aesthetics 411
Chris Bateman
16. Mobile Game Play and Everyday Life 444
Barbara Grüter, Nassrin Hajinejad, and Iaroslav Sheptykin
17. Video Games, Machinima, and Classic Cinema: Meaningful Gaming 471
Pilar Lacasa, María Ruth García-Pernía, and Sara Cortés
18. Video Games in Educational Settings: Developing Skills for New Media Learning 502
Ana Belen García Varela, Héctor Del Castillo, David Herrero, Natalia Monjelat, and Mirian Checa
19. Retro-Computing Community Sites and the Museum 523
Helen Stuckey and Melanie Swalwell
20. From the Deceptively Simple to the Pleasurably Complex: The Rise of Cooperative Address in the History of Video Games 548
Carl Therrien
Part III Game Design and Development
21. Emotion in Games 575
Celso M. de Melo, Ana Paiva, and Jonathan Gratch
22. Task Deployment in Three Types of Game Spatial Structures 593
Chuen-Tsai Sun and Sheng-yi Hsu
23. Social Ontology of Digital Games 607
Ivan Mosca
24. Gaming with Purpose: Heuristic Understanding of Ubiquitous Game Development and Design for Human Computation 645
Lindsay D. Grace and Peter Jamieson
25. Beyond Stereotypes of Gender and Gaming: Video Games Made by Middle School Students 667
Jill Denner, Eloy Ortiz, Shannon Campe, and Linda Werner
26. Decade of Game Making for Learning: From Tools to Communities 689
Quinn Burke and Yasmin B. Kafai
27. Designing Interactive Tangible Games for Diverse Forms of Play 710
Tilde Bekker, Ben Schouten, and Mark de Graaf
28. Artisanal Local Networks: Game Work and Culture in Independent Game Production 730
Orlando Guevara-Villalobos
Index 751
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“The broad overview of the field and the varied perspectives different chapters offer are valuable summaries of the state of the art in video game research. Both graduate students starting their research work and professional developers can benefit from this wide-ranging appraisal.” (Computing Reviews, 10 June 2015)