-
1986 - Copyrighted Subcultures: Shared Fantasy.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Oct 31, 2012
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:02 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Book Review,
Discipline: Sociology,
TODO,
Archive,
Material to read
Dayan, Daniel (1986). Copyrighted Subcultures: Shared Fantasy... [Book Review] American Journal of Sociology (AJS), 91 (5), March, 1219-1228.
Located in
Archives
/
Primary Archives
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
-
1989 - Relationship between game playing and personality
-
by
RPG Research Admin
—
published
Jan 25, 2011
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 02:59 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Abstract,
correlative research,
Discipline: Psychology,
research,
Peer Reviewed,
TODO,
Archive,
Material to read
Carroll, James L. and Carolin, Paul M. (1989, June). Relationship between game playing and personality. Psychological Reports, part 1, 705-706. Simón replicated in Central Michigan University study comparing gamers to non-gamers. 2 small pages.
Located in
Archives
/
Primary Archives
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
-
1990 - Alienation and the game Dungeons and Dragons
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jan 23, 2011
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 02:59 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Aspect: Meaning / Meaninglessness,
Potential RPG Research Question,
Effects of RPG,
Discipline: Psychology,
research,
stereotype(s) disproved,
Peer Reviewed,
stereotype propagation,
TODO,
Archive,
Material to read,
causal study(ies)
DeRenard, Lisa A. and Kline, Linda Mannik (1990). Alienation and the game Dungeons and Dragons. Psychological Reports, 66, 1219-1222. This study examined differences in feelings of alienation between 35 active players and 35 nonplayers. Gamers diverge from peer-culture in mass media awareness, but not in more significant aspects. 4 small pages.
Located in
Archives
/
Primary Archives
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
-
1991 - RELATIONSHIP OF ROLE-PLAYING GAMES TO SELF-REPORTED CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR
-
by
admin
—
published
Jun 13, 2018
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 02:59 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Full Text,
Others' research,
Peer Reviewed: Unconfirmed,
Discipline: Psychology,
research,
stereotype(s) disproved,
Archive,
Material to read
SUZANNE ABYETA AND JAMES FOREST. University of Manitoba. Psychological Reports, 1991, 69, 1187-1192. O Psychological Reports 1991
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
Full Text Documents Waiting for permission to publish publicly
/
Documents moved to New Archive
-
1991 - Relationship of role-playing games to self-reported criminal behaviour.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Apr 17, 2012
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 02:59 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Abstract Only,
Others' research,
Abstract,
correlative research,
Discipline: Psychology,
research,
Peer Reviewed,
sociological / sociology,
TODO,
Archive,
Material to read
Abyeta, Suzanne and Forest, James (1991, December). Gamers are lower in criminal tendencies than rest of population.
Located in
Archives
/
Primary Archives
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
-
1993 - The Impact of Unstructured Games of Fantasy and Role Playing on an Inpatient Unit for Adolescents
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jan 30, 2013
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:00 PM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Abstract Only,
Others' research,
Peer Reviewed: Unconfirmed,
Adolescent,
Effects of RPG,
Discipline: Psychology,
RPG and psychiatric disorders,
Youth,
Anti-rpg,
In-patient,
TODO,
Archive,
Material to read
Ascherman, Lee I. Menninger Clinic, Children's Division, Topeka, KS 66601. Int J Group Psychother. 1993 Jul;43(3):335-44. - The impact of unstructured games of fantasy and role playing on an inpatient unit for adolescents
Ascherman, L IView Profile. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy43.3 (Jul 1993): 335-344.
Located in
Archives
/
Primary Archives
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
-
1999 - Through The Looking Glass: An Exploration of the Interplay between Player and Character Selves in Role-Playing Games
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jan 13, 2016
—
last modified
Nov 05, 2023 10:27 AM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Experience/Effect: Bleed,
Social Skills Development through RPG,
Aspect: Empathy,
Potential RPG Research Question,
Archive,
Material to read
Author: Nicholas Yee. My main interest in RPG’s is in its interface with our individual personalities. I am interested in finding out how our personalities influence how we shape our characters or what we are trying to get out of the game.
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Full Text Documents Waiting for permission to publish publicly
-
2004 - RPGR-A00001 An Overview of the History and Potential Therapeutic Value of Role-playing Gaming
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Sep 30, 2004
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 10:53 AM
—
filed under:
Pending Review,
RPG Research Essay,
Archive,
Discipline: TR/RT
Role-playing gaming (RPGing) has its roots as far back as ancient history with the development of war-gaming. War-gaming is the simulation of combat strategies and tactics represented in reduced scale with various rules, often with some sort of randomizing agent such as dice or cards to add an element of “realistic” unpredictability. As long as there has been organized warfare, there appears to have been some form of war-gaming in every culture throughout history. Chess and the Chinese game Go both are very much based on war-gaming, but considered lacking by some because of the lack of unpredictability offered by “true” war-gaming using some degree of randomization.
The RPG Research Project Document ID #RPGR-A001-A-20120927A-CC
Located in
Archives
/
The RPG Research Project Specific Archives
/
Project Archives
-
2006 (Video) - RPGR-A00007-part-2 - RPG Adapted for Deaf Using ASL Flyer
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Dec 12, 2011
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 10:53 AM
—
filed under:
Deaf,
video,
ASL (American Sign Language),
RPG Research Essay,
Archive,
Discipline: TR/RT
Role-Playing Gaming Adapted for the Deaf Using American Sign Language Flyer by W.A. Hawkes-Robinson
Located in
Archives
/
The RPG Research Project Specific Archives
/
Project Archives
-
2007 - RPGR-A00002 The Potential Benefits and Deficits of Role-Playing Gaming
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Sep 30, 2015
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2022 10:53 AM
—
filed under:
RPG Research Essay,
Archive,
Discipline: TR/RT
by W.A. Hawkes-Robinson
Original Version April 10, 2007
Updated for Creative Commons September 27th, 2012.
RPG Research Project Document ID: #RPGR-A00002-D-20120927.CC
Located in
Archives
/
The RPG Research Project Specific Archives
/
Project Archives