The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
Game Interfaces as Bodily Techniques
Abstract
This chapter discusses the way that new video game interfaces such as those employed by Guitar Hero™, Dance Dance Revolution, and the Nintendo Wii™ are being used to invoke the whole body as a participant in the game text. As such, new video games involve more than cognitive education; they impart a set of body habits to the player. Drawing on Marcel Mauss’s concept of “bodily technique,” I propose a new vocabulary for understanding these devices, referring to them as bodily interfaces. Next, I discuss three aspects of bodily interfaces: mode of capture, haptics, and button remapping. In order to help educators take advantage of these developments, I conclude by pointing to theoretical literature on the relationship between the physical and mental aspects of the learning process that may be useful in rethinking electronic games.
Related Content
|
Johnny L. Williams.
© 2026.
26 pages.
|
|
Anthony Mark Gray, James E. Bartlett.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
Christopher H. Slotboom.
© 2026.
72 pages.
|
|
Ameera Law, Sebastian Gutierrez, Keren Asgodom, Mahrukh Khan.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
Kashish Ali, Autumn Garcia, Alina Vadsariya.
© 2026.
20 pages.
|
|
Michelle Bartlett.
© 2026.
22 pages.
|
|
Tarana Afrin Chandel.
© 2026.
32 pages.
|
|
|