The Games Institute (GI) is pleased to announce the recipients of its first-ever seed grant funding competition. In total, the GI Seed Program will support eight interdisciplinary initiatives for a total of $110,000 over the next year. The competition promoted interdisciplinary collaborations in teams of researchers spanning many different disciplines and research areas.
The seed grant recipients will combine their varied expertise to tackle real-world problems facing indigenous communities, health care workers, children with speech difficulties, mothers facing homelessness, citizen scientists, and VR, XR and social media consumers.
GI leadership gratefully acknowledges the hard work of the seed grant adjudication committee. Executive Director Dr. Neil Randall commented:
This seed grant program fulfills a goal the GI has had for quite some time. As a research center, the GI always supports research, but rarely do we get an opportunity to initiate it through direct funding. We're very pleased to fund this set of proposals, all of which were excellent in conception and quality. I congratulate the recipients, and I thank them sincerely.
Congratulations to the following award recipients!
Dementia-friendly First Responders Edu-action: An Interactive Participatory and Co-designed Training Course for Indigenous First Responders
Dr. Hector Perez (School of Public Health Sciences), Dr. Lili Liu (School of Public Health Sciences) Dr. Antonio Miguel-Cruz (University of Alberta), Dr. Noelannah Neubauer (School of Public Health Sciences), Isabella Rose Chawrun (School of Public Health Sciences), and Cathy Conway (Project Manager).
“Dementia is over-represented among First Nations. First responders lack awareness that dementia-related missing incidents differ from other types of missing occurrences. Search and rescue training for Indigenous communities is delivered by organizations like SAR-1. Education about dementia and how to address risks of persons with dementia going missing would increase awareness, capacity and competence among First Nations personnel. We will use storytelling and gamification to co-create a virtual training course to support Indigenous first responders and search and rescue personnel. We will collaborate with first responders (e.g., police and paramedics) in two Indigenous communities, the Games Institute, and SAR-1. “
Empowering Meaningful Customizations in Social Virtual Reality
Dr. Eugene Kukshinov (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business), Dr. Daniel Harley (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business), Jonathan Baltrusaitis (English Language and Literature), and Dr. Lennart Nacke (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business and Communication Arts).
“As an emerging technologically-mediated social environment, social virtual reality (SVR) is said to provide improved opportunities for creative, physical, and social interactions in virtual spaces. While Meta has recently released new avatars to improve diverse representation, current VR research is biased towards white male participants, and little is known about how more diverse demographics interact within SVR. Focusing on avatar use and customization, we will apply a critical, intersectional approach to better understand how diverse demographics of participants navigate social virtual reality, examining how the potential benefits of these spaces can become more available to everyone by design.”
Exploring Digital Feminist Futures: Creating Media Tools and Interventions for the Resistance
Dr. Brianna I. Wiens (English Language & Literature), Dr. Shana MacDonald (Communication Arts), Dr. Cayley MacArthur (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business), Sid Heeg (Environment, Enterprise, and Development), Kate Bradley (History), and Thuvaraka Mahenthiran (Psychology).
“Over the last two decades, both feminist and antifeminist sentiments––including racist, imperialist, queerphobic, transphobic, and ableist sentiments––have been on the rise, with the technologies we use daily responsible for circulating these media toxicities by their very design. Despite repeated calls for regulations and protections, few exist. As such, there remains a need for everyday people to harness the potential of the internet to learn not only how to protect themselves but how to fight back. This project directly addresses this need through an explicit research-creation approach to studying and designing public digital toolkits for resistance via public programming, archiving, and designing workshops informed by data feminist principles.”
Free-range Gamesourcing Annotated Rhetorical Figure Data
Dr. Randy Allen Harris (English Language and Literature), and Dr. Olga Vechtomova (Management Sciences).
“This proposal is to adapt for free-range release an existing Citizen Science game developed within the GI ecosystem, to harvest instances of language exhibiting extra-grammatical patterns known as rhetorical figures in order to build training sets for Machine Learning algorithms.”
Interactive Training Tool for Injury Assessment of a Human Joint
Dr. Oliver Schneider (Management Sciences), Dr. Mark Hancock (Management Sciences), Rob Burns (Kinesiology), Marco Moran-Ledesma (Systems Design Engineering), and Emily Shiu (Psychology).
“Manual musculoskeletal assessments allow rehabilitation practitioners to identify soft tissue injuries (e.g., knee ligament sprains) through visual and haptic cues. However, becoming proficient at assessing patients’ joint integrity through manual physical exams is difficult due to 1) the wide range of joint conditions and 2) the limited practice opportunities on injured clients both clinically and in an academic setting. Novice students find themselves limited to practicing on their peers’ healthy joints or relying on non-tactile learning materials, such as lectures, videos, or demonstrations. This model, and the XR environment we have planned, will provide students with exposure to various joint conditions and injury grades.”
Marillac Place - Gamifying the “Praise with a Raise” Program
Dr. Cayley MacArthur (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business), Dr. James Wallace (Public Health Sciences), and Veen Wong (Public Health Sciences).
“Marillac Place is a women’s shelter whose mission is: to support new mothers and mothers-to-be facing homelessness in Waterloo Region by providing a safe living environment, teaching parenting & life skills and developing supportive relationships. Its residents participate in the Praise with a Raise Program. Marillac Place collects data on how effectively residents accomplish their program goals. Currently, Marillac Place does not have an interface for their residents to review their own goals and performance. The team, with Marillac Place, will develop an app that residents can use to build essential life, parenting, and social skills for independent living. The app will also be used by Marillac Place staff to access individual performance in the program. The app will consider trauma-informed computing and include gamification elements to promote engagement and encourage task completion.”
Privacy in Extended Reality
Hilda Hadan (Systems Design Engineering), Dr. Lennart Nacke (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business and Communication Arts), and Dr. Leah Zhang-Kennedy (Stratford School of Interaction Design and Business).
“Our project focuses on the privacy implication of XR, a newly emerged and rapidly evolving game-related technology. As social interactions are now moving into XR, the immersion of XR creates unique challenges for human privacy. We aim to investigate people’s existing knowledge of privacy issues of XR and how the knowledge influences their privacy concerns and privacy-seeking behaviors. XR technology and gamification of social interactions using it are still in their infancy, creating this opportunity to develop solutions for potential privacy issues of the technology proactively.”
VR Speech Therapy Kit
Emily Shiu (Psychology), Dr. Oliver Schneider (Management Sciences), Jing Hao Yao (Software Engineering), Karthik Prasad (Management Sciences,) and Thomas Mastantuono (Management Sciences).
“Children with autism or certain other communicative disorders struggle to communicate their wants and needs, either due to difficulty understanding intentions and social cues, or because of struggles in verbalizing their thoughts. This often results in reduced quality-of-life for these children and their parents. Receiving speech therapy teaches these kids the communicative skills needed to thrive and getting therapy earlier results in better outcomes. However, speech therapy is costly, limiting accessibility for those with lower income. Additionally, availability is limited by how many speech therapists are in a region. We are developing a VR speech therapy kit to either supplement existing speech therapy, or to provide an accessible option for people who cannot afford or allot time for dedicated speech therapy.”