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[ecrea] CFP Avatars and Humans: Representing Users in Digital Games
Fri Apr 23 16:22:25 GMT 2010
Reminder: CFP "Avatars and
Humans: Representting Users in Digital Games" ends April 30
Apologies for cross-postings. Please send to interested
colleagues and students.
REMINDER: CALL FOR PAPERS
AVATARS AND HUMANS. REPRESENTING USERS IN DIGITAL GAMES
Preconference to the ECREA 2010 – 3rd European Communication
Conference
12 October 2010, Hamburg, Germany
http://www.ecrea2010hamburg.eu
==Topic & Questions==
With the rise of digital interactive media, “avatars” – computer
generated visual representations of users – have become a crucial
link
between users and the digital spaces they navigate. While the term
“avatar” reaches back to Hinduist scriptures ca. 200 BC, and the use
of
player representations in games can be traced to the earliest known
games played more than 4.000 years ago, it was only in 1985 that the
multi-user domain Habitat introduced the term for user
representations
in virtual worlds. Today, avatars are used in digital games as well
as
e-commerce applications, social virtual environments, virtual
meetings
and conferences, and many more digital spaces and applications.
However, avatars are not just an interface users manipulate to
access
and act in digital spaces – avatars and their human users form
complex
relationships. For instance, avatars may represent the users’ own or
created identity, users may develop an emotional attachment or
parasocial relation to their avatars, or the design or activities of
an
avatar may infringe rights or develop an economic value.
For the pre-conference “Avatars and Humans”, we encourage
submissions
from all disciplinary and methodological backgrounds on the complex
relations between avatars and their users. Submissions might
address,
but are not limited to the following topics and questions:
* Creating and Using Avatars: How and why do we create avatars, what
are
the motives and effects of specific kinds of avatars and avatar
usage?
Do we create avatars similar or dissimilar to us? What kinds of
in-game
avatars and avatar features enhance or delimit qualities of user
experience, such as presence, immersion or enjoyment?
* My Avatar and Me: How might we describe the (long-term)
relationship
between users and their avatars? Which factors influence the users’
identification with and emotional attachment to their avatars?
* The (Para-)Sociality of Avatars: Which social psychological
factors
affect our (avatar’s) interaction with other avatars, either
controlled
by users or an algorithm?
* Avatars and Profiles: How do avatar-based interactive spaces and
the
(mostly) „profile-based” spaces of social network sites and social
media
relate, especially in regard to matters of identity and relationship
management? Can we observe a growing convergence or interdependence
of
the two?
* Analyzing Avatars: Exploring the user-avatar relationship also
requires the description of the avatar itself. What are the relevant
properties of avatars? Which analytical instruments can and should
be
employed for systematic descriptions, codings, analyses of
avatars?
* Coding Avatars: As computer-generated representations of users,
avatars have to be designed and coded, which puts important material
constraints and preconditions on potential user-avatar relations.
Which
factors afford or constraint the customizability and variability of
avatars? Which models of artifical intelligence guide the simulated
behaviour of computer-controlled avatars?
* Avatar Rights and Regulations: People invest time and sometimes
sizeable amounts of money in their avatars, and avatars develop
reputations that might radiate on their users (or vice versa). Put
differently, users develop vested interests in their avatars, and
avatars develop an „avatar biography”: Do we need specific “avatar
rights” to protect the histories, experiences and reputation of
avatars?
Which virtual as well as real-life circumstances are neccessary to
govern avatars effectively?
* Behind and Beyond the Avatar: Which social and cultural processes
take
place between individuals, avatars and the communities they play in?
How
do the performances, gestures and emotions of avatars affect
community
building or the emergence of public communication in game worlds as
well
as everyday social behavior and society and vice versa? Does
avatar-based interaction show the same social dynamics like
face-to-face
interaction (social control, negotiation, face work etc.), or does
it
differ – and how?
* Methodology of Avatar Research: Which paradigms and instruments
might
be applied to research concerning the above questions? What is the
specific potential, what are possible obstacles of methodological
and/or
ethical nature when researching avatars?
==Link==
For further details, see the website and download the Call for
Papers
at:
http://bit.ly/ECREAgames
==Sumbission==
All abstracts should be submitted through the ECREA 2010 website no
later than: 30 April 2010.
Please note that this submission deadline will not be extended!
Enter your submissions at
http://www.ecrea2010hamburg.eu.
To avoid technical problems, early submission is strongly
encouraged.
==Timeline==
* Deadline for submission of abstracts: April 30, 2010.
* Notification of acceptance: May 31, 2010
* Submission of Full Papers: September 15, 2010
* Early Bird Get together: October 11, 2010
* Pre-Conference: October 12, 2010 December 2009: Online
submission
system open
==Local Organizers==
Hamburg Media School, Hans Bredow Institute for Media Research,
Ilmenau
University of Technology
==Venue==
The pre-conference will take place at:
Hamburg Media School
Finkenau 35
D-22081 Hamburg, Germany
==Contact==
Dr. Jan-Hinrik Schmidt
Hans-Bredow-Institute for Media Research
Warburgstr. 8-10, D-20354 Hamburg, Germany
(j.schmidt /at/ hans-bredow-institut.de)
http://www.hans-bredow-institut.de/en
Prof. Dr. Sabine Trepte
Hamburg Media School
Finkenau 35, D-22081 Hamburg, Germany
(s.trepte /at/ hamburgmediaschool.com)
http://www.hamburgmediaschool.com/english
Prof. Dr. Jeffrey Wimmer
Ilmenau University of Technology
Ehrenbergstr. 29, D-98693 Ilmenau, Germany
(jeffrey.wimmer /at/ tu-ilmenau.de)
http://www.tu-ilmenau.de/fakmn/Virtuelle-Welten-Dig.vwds.0.html
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web:
http://www.ecrea.eu
----------------------------
E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web:
http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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