From Simulation to Imitation: Controllers, Corporeality, and Mimetic Play

被引:12
作者
de Castell, Suzanne [1 ]
Jenson, Jennifer [2 ]
Thumlert, Kurt [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ontario Inst Technol, Fac Educ, 11 Simcoe St N, Oshawa, ON L1H 7L7, Canada
[2] York Univ, Fac Educ, Pedag & Technol, N York, ON, Canada
[3] York Univ, Fac Educ, N York, ON, Canada
关键词
actor-network theory; consoles; controllers; digital games; education; embodied competence; game-based learning; imitation; learning; learning environments; mimesis; play; simulation; technical artifacts;
D O I
10.1177/1046878114542316
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Background. We contend that a conceptual conflation of simulation and imitation persists at the heart of claims for the power of game-based simulations for learning. Recent changes in controller-technologies and gaming systems, we argue, make this conflation of concepts more readily apparent, and its significant educational implications more evident. Aim. This article examines the evolution in controller technologies of imitation that support players' embodied competence, rather than players' ability to simulate such competence. Digital gameplay undergoes an epistemological shift when player and game interactions are no longer restricted to simulations of actions on a screen, but instead support embodied imitation as a central element of gameplay. We interrogate the distinctive meanings and affordances of simulation and imitation and offer a critical conceptual strategy for refining, and indeed redefining, what counts as learning in and from digital games. Method. We draw upon actor-network theory to identify what is educationally significant about the digitally mediated learning ecologies enabled by imitation-based gaming consoles and controllers. Actor-network theory helps us discern relations between human actors and technical artifacts, illuminating the complex inter-dependencies and inter-actions of the socio-technical support networks too long overlooked in androcentric theories of human action and cognitive psychology. Conclusion. By articulating distinctions between simulation and imitation, we show how imitative practices afforded by mimetic game controllers and next-generation motion-capture technologies offer a different picture of learning through playing digital games, and suggest novel and productive avenues for research and educational practice.
引用
收藏
页码:332 / 355
页数:24
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