-
Psychiatry
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jan 11, 2016
—
last modified
May 29, 2023 10:02 PM
Research documents related to role-playing and role-playing games. This collection only lists the documents tagged with "Discipline: Psychiatric"
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Documents Sorted by Discipline
-
1979 - Fantasy in psychiatric patients; exploring a myth
-
by
RPG Research Admin
—
published
Jan 01, 2004
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:01 PM
—
filed under:
Discipline: Psychiatry,
Others' research,
Peer Reviewed: Unconfirmed,
RPG and psychiatric disorders,
Citation Only,
TODO,
Material to read
Starker, Steven. “.” Hospital & Community Psychiatry, 30.1 (1979): 25-30. Rather than getting lost in fantasies, psychiatric patients generally suffer from too little fantasy. 6 pages. (1979, January).
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Archives
-
Healthcare Professionals
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
May 30, 2016
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 10:52 AM
This page provides some key areas of note specifically of interest for healthcare professionals. This includes the broad range of services from psychology & psychiatry, to nurses, many kinds of therapists, etc.
-
Social Workers’ Perceptions of the Association Between Role Playing Games and Psychopathology
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
Abstract Only,
Others' research,
1 - No Public Permission Yet,
Potential RPG Research Question,
research,
Peer Reviewed,
Discipline: Social Work,
stereotype propagation,
Stigma,
blog posting,
Material to read
Whereas role-playing and table-top role-play games (RPGs) have been proven to have potential as therapeutic tools, playing RPGs is often stereotypically associated with social incompetence and psychiatric disorders.
Located in
Blog
-
The Personality of Fantasy Game Players
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Apr 29, 2017
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:00 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Full Text,
Child Abuse,
Assault / Abuse,
Potential RPG Research Question,
correlative research,
Discipline: Psychology,
2 - Pending Request For Public Permission,
Others' research,
Peer Reviewed,
Personality
Neil A. Douse & Ian Chris McManus (1993). The Personality of Fantasy Game Players. British Journal of Psychology, 84 (4), 505-509.
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
Additional Reference Material
/
To Be Sorted
-
Therapeutic Role-Playing Games (RPG Therapy) for older adults. & Cohort Considerations
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
Population: Adults,
Aspect: Memory,
Population: Older Adults / Elderly / Geriatric,
blog posting,
Population: Older Adults,
Effects of RPG,
recreation therapy,
therapeutic role-playing game,
In-patient,
therapeutic recreation,
Aspect: Cognition,
Discipline: Psychiatry,
RPG and psychiatric disorders,
therapeutic rpg,
Informal / Less formal - Observations,
rpg for therapy,
Opinion,
Case study(ies),
Aspect: Assessment Tool(s),
Discipline: Psychology,
anecdote,
recreational therapy,
Setting: Long-term care
In the past 10 years I have been receiving increasingly frequent inquiries about using RPGs in therapeutic settings for older adults. Here is a summary of information to help you get started with this population...
Located in
Blog
-
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.
-
RPG Training Programs
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
Discipline: Psychiatry,
Effects of RPG,
Discipline: Psychology,
therapeutic rpg,
therapeutic role-playing game,
Discipline: Education / Formal Classroom Setting,
rpg for therapy,
RPG Training,
News,
blog posting,
rpg for education,
Role-Playing Gaming Therapeutic Recreation Handbook of Practice,
Discipline: TR/RT
The RPG Therapeutics LLC website has updated the section of the site listing training options for "Introduction to RPG Training Series", "Role-Playing Game Advocate", "RPG Facilitator", "Game Master in Education", and "Game Master in Therapy" and "Introduction" series of training and certification programs.
Located in
Blog
-
Thomas Radecki
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
last modified
May 10, 2022 11:56 PM
—
filed under:
Glossary,
Anti-rpg
Oft cited by anti-RPG supporters. License to practice as a doctor of psychiatry, famous in the battle against role-playing games in the 1980s, repeatedly revoked license, and a repeat offending violator of practice, and convicted criminal...
Located in
Archives
/
Wiki, Glossary, & Bibliography
/
Glossary
-
1988 - Therapy is fantasy: role-playing, healing, and the construction of symbolic order.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Nov 19, 2012
—
last modified
Nov 05, 2023 10:27 AM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Anthroplogical/anthropology,
Case study(ies),
Potential RPG Research Question,
Effects of RPG,
correlative research,
sociological / sociology,
Diagnosis: Depression,
anecdote,
TODO,
Material to read
Hughes, John (1988). Therapy is fantasy: role-playing, healing, and the construction of symbolic order.
Australian National University honors paper in medical anthropology on the use of RPG in the self-treatment of clinical depression. 23 pages.
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Archives