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Aphantasia
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Nov 29, 2017
—
last modified
May 10, 2022 11:56 PM
— filed under:
Glossary
Inability to "visualize" or form a "mental picture" based on visual sensory information.
Located in
Archives
/
Wiki, Glossary, & Bibliography
/
Glossary
Old Research Repository
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Aug 16, 2017
—
last modified
Jul 10, 2022 05:27 PM
This is RPG Research's older research repository. We are currently moving more than 3,000 content items (1 multi-page essay equals 1 content item) from this old site to our new repository at www.rpgresearch.com/research . The new repository is better organized and formatted, but it takes months for our volunteers to move all this content from the old site to the new site, so we are keeping the old repository available until the move is complete. All new research is being added to the new repository, no new research is being added to this old repository as of 2018.
Tabletop RPG Recreation Therapy Example Scenario - Visual Impairment
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
— filed under:
therapeutic role-playing game
,
TBI - Traumatic Brain Injury
,
Disabilities
,
therapeutic rpg
,
research
,
blog
,
rpg for therapy
,
Disability: Visual Impairment / Blind
,
blog posting
,
visual impairment / blind
This is an excerpt from the RPG Handbook of Practice book I have been working on. This section is for clients with significant to complete visual impairment due to traumatic brain injury to the occipital lobe. It can be extrapolated for the whole range of visual impairments. The client wants to participate in a non-therapy-setting leisure activity of tabletop role-playing gaming. The Recreation Therapist will need to evaluate and write up the potential challenges and modifications that may be necessary for the client to participate in this activity with as little difficulty as possible....
Located in
Blog
Cognition - Using RPGs to Enhance the Learning Process, from the Cognitive Neuropsychology Perspective
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Nov 29, 2017
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:00 PM
— filed under:
Discipline: Neuroscience
,
Aspect: Memory
,
Discipline: Psychology
,
Discipline: Education / Formal Classroom Setting
,
Discipline: Cognitive Neuroscience
,
Research Question / Discussion Topic
,
Aspect: Cognition
This could be applied to all RPG Formats in various ways, with different strengths and weaknesses presenting in each format: Tabletop, Live-Action (LARP), computer-based, or solo adventure books/modules. Ideally a mix of all 4 formats would likely have the most powerful effects. This is from a recent assignment for a cognitive neuroscience class. I only had about an hour or two to whip this up, so this is just a simple, quick essay for a class assignment. It isn't very well put together, because the assignments are only worth about 1-10 points out of 1,000, while the tests add up to 800 points of the total grade, so please forgive the lack of formality and poor quality. Hopefully you will still find the information listed useful. I hope in the future to write a much better, more formal version, but with my existing backlog, who knows when that will be, so I am posting this here as a placeholder reminder for me to hopefully work on it in the future. Even in this rough format, it may still be useful for some interesting topical discussions.
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Hawke Robinson
Wizards of the Coast D&D Dragon Talk Broadcast Notes
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
— filed under:
RPG Therapeutics LLC
,
Discipline: RPGT (Role-Playing Game Therapy)
,
recreation therapy
,
correlative research
,
Brain Injury (Stroke, TBI, etc.)
,
video
,
RPG Format: Tabletop
,
blog posting
,
RPG Textbook
,
Effects of RPG
,
The RPG Research Podcast / Vidcast
,
Drum Circle
,
News
,
interview / media mention
,
suicide / suicidal
,
pdd / asd / autism spectrum
,
Violence
,
therapeutic rpg
,
RPG Format: Computer-based
,
broadcast
,
Anti-rpg
,
rpg for therapy
,
hawke robinson
,
RPG Research Interview
,
Drum, drums, drumming, drum circle, drum circle facilitation
,
RPG Format: Live-action
,
rpg for education
,
recreational therapy
Here are notes from the January 22nd, 2018 interview broadcast at Wizards of the Coast's Dungeons & Dragons, "Dragon Talk" with Greg Tito and Shelly Mazzanoble, interviewing John Welker & Hawke Robinson of RPG Research, Spokane Area Gaming Alliance, & RPG Therapeutics LLC, about role-playing game education, therapy, and more. Currently a work in progress. I am working on it each day in small snippets of time while juggling everything else. I will let folks know when it is ready for sharing.
Located in
Blog