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(A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game
by
Hodge, Sarah E.
, McAlaney, John
, Taylor, Jacqui
in
Decision making
/ digital games
/ Ethical aspects
/ moral foundations theory
/ Morality
/ purpose-made games
/ Technology
/ Video games
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
(A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game
by
Hodge, Sarah E.
, McAlaney, John
, Taylor, Jacqui
in
Decision making
/ digital games
/ Ethical aspects
/ moral foundations theory
/ Morality
/ purpose-made games
/ Technology
/ Video games
2019
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(A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game
Journal Article
(A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game
2019
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Overview
A purpose-made video game was used to measure response time and moral alignment of in-game moral decisions, which were made by 115 undergraduate students. Overall, moral decisions took between 4–6 seconds and were mostly pro-social. Previous gameplay, in-game, and post-game experiences predicted in-game moral alignment. Real-life moral salience was not related to in-game decision-making. The implications of these results are discussed in the context of the demands of video games and in-game moral decision-making models.
Publisher
Cogitatio Press,Cogitatio
Subject
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