Dienst van SURF
© 2025 SURF
The Maritime Spatial Planning (MSP) Challenge game: Short Sea Shipping (SSS) Edition is a table-top strategy board game, designed for policy-makers and stakeholders involved in MSP, short-sea shipping and the Blue Economy. It is a ‘serious game’, allowing the development of a better understanding of the issues involved in MSP through creative and imaginative role playing, taking into account the relevant professional and personal experience of the players. The authors present and discuss the use of the MSP Challenge board game to test how, and to what extent, the concept can help stakeholders understand Maritime Spatial Planning.
LINK
Game Mechanics is aimed at game design students and industry professionals who want to improve their understanding of how to design, build, and test the mechanics of a game. Game Mechanics will show you how to design, test, and tune the core mechanics of a game—any game, from a huge role-playing game to a casual mobile phone game to a board game. Along the way, we’ll use many examples from real games that you may know: Pac-Man, Monopoly, Civilization, StarCraft II, and others. The authors provide two features. One is a tool called Machinations that can be used to visualize and simulate game mechanics on your own computer, without writing any code or using a spreadsheet. The other is a design pattern library, including the deep structures of game economies that generate challenge and many kinds of feedback loops.
Purpose: This study examined the effects of a giant (4×3 m) exercising board game intervention on ambulatory physical activity (PA) and a broader array of physical and psychological outcomes among nursing home residents. Materials and methods: A quasi-experimental longitudinal study was carried out in two comparable nursing homes. Ten participants (aged 82.5±6.3 and comprising 6 women) meeting the inclusion criteria took part in the 1-month intervention in one nursing home, whereas 11 participants (aged 89.9±3.1 with 8 women) were assigned to the control group in the other nursing home. The giant exercising board game required participants to per-form strength, flexibility, balance and endurance activities. The assistance provided by an exercising specialist decreased gradually during the intervention in an autonomy-oriented approach based on the self-determination theory. The following were assessed at baseline, after the intervention and after a follow-up period of 3 months: PA (steps/day and energy expenditure/day with ActiGraph), cognitive status (mini mental state examination), quality of life (EuroQol 5-dimensions), motivation for PA (Behavioral Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire-2), gait and balance (Tinetti and Short Physical Performance Battery), functional mobility (timed up and go), and the muscular isometric strength of the lower limb muscles. Results and conclusion: In the intervention group, PA increased from 2,921 steps/day at baseline to 3,358 steps/day after the intervention (+14.9%, P=0.04) and 4,083 steps/day (+39.8%, P=0.03) after 3 months. Energy expenditure/day also increased after the intervention (+110 kcal/day, +6.3%, P=0.01) and after 3 months (+219 kcal/day, +12.3%, P=0.02). Quality of life (P<0.05), balance and gait (P<0.05), and strength of the ankle (P<0.05) were also improved after 3 months. Such improvements were not observed in the control group. The preliminary results are promising but further investigation is required to confirm and evaluate the long-term effectiveness of PA interventions in nursing homes.
Mensen met autisme redden het vaker niet dan wel op school en op de arbeidsmarkt. Niet kunnen omgaan met stress, bijvoorbeeld door veranderingen in het werk, is de belangrijkste oorzaak. Het zelf kunnen herkennen van stress en nadenken over de oorzaken daarvan is weinig mensen met ASS gegeven, en ook voor mensen in de omgeving (coaches, docenten, collega’s) wordt het vaak pas duidelijk als het te laat is. Vroegtijdige signalering van stress om uitval te voorkomen is derhalve wenselijk. Doel van dit project is het ontwikkelen van een digitale stress duidings- en coachingstool, waarbij zowel het perspectief van begeleiders/coaches als dat van de persoon met autisme zelf wordt ondersteund. Daarbij maken we gebruik van de wetenschappelijk voldoende bewezen technologie van huidweerstand-analyse. Zoals bij alle technologieën die ontwikkeld worden voor stresssignalering geldt ook hier dat menselijke duiding nodig blijft. Centraal in deze aanvraag staan technologische ontwikkelingen die in gang gezet zijn binnen Fontys Hogeschool ICT en Game Solutions Lab om stress-indicatoren te meten en te communiceren, gecombineerd met de domeinkennis van Leo Kanner, Leermakers Zorggroep, de Nederlandse Vereniging voor Autisme (NVA) en Student+. De innovatie kracht van dit project ligt in de combinatie van menselijke kracht én technologische ondersteuning in lijn met het probleemgebied Enabling Adaptation binnen de Roadmap Design for Change. Deze combinatie maakt het mogelijk om op grond van objectieve data sneller en effectiever stressoren in kaart te brengen en zelfduiding te stimuleren op het juiste moment. Hiermee worden niet alleen actuele risico’s beperkt, maar zal ook voor de lange termijn leiden tot betere zelfkennis en meer zelfregie. Hierdoor kan de doelgroep door juiste aanpassingen wel duurzaam onderwijs volgen of aan het werk blijven.
GAMING HORIZONS is a multidisciplinary project that aims to expand the research and innovation agenda on serious gaming and gamification. The project is particularly interested in the use of games for learning and cultural development. Gamification - and gaming more broadly – are very important from a socio-economic point of view, but over the past few years they have been at the centre of critical and challenging debates, which highlighted issues such as gender and minority representation, and exploitative game mechanics. Our project’s key contention is that it is important for the European ICT community to engage with design trends and social themes that have affected profoundly the mainstream and ‘independent’ game development cultures over the past few years, especially because the boundaries between leisure and serious games are increasingly blurred. GAMING HORIZONS is a direct response to the official recognition by the H2020 programme of work that multidisciplinary research can help to advance the integration between Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) and the Social Sciences and the Humanities (SSH). The project’s objective is to enable a higher uptake of socially responsible ICT-related research in relation to gaming. This objective will be achieved through a research-based exchange between communities of developers, policy makers, users and researchers. The methodology will involve innovative data collection activities and consultations with a range of stakeholders over a period of 14 months. We will interrogate the official ‘H2020 discourse’ on gamification – with a particular focus on ‘gamified learning’ - whilst engaging with experts, developers and critical commentators through interviews, events, workshops and systematic dialogue with an Advisory Board. Ultimately, GAMING HORIZONS will help identify future directions at the intersection of ethics, social research, and both the digital entertainment and serious games industries.EU FundingThe 14-month research project 'Gaming Horizons' was funded by the European Commission through the Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.