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A Matter of Perspective : A Qualitative study of Player-presence in First-person Video GamesHansson, Mikael, Karlsson, Stefan January 2016 (has links)
In this study we aimed to investigate the process through which players of video games situate, and form an understanding of their presence within the virtual game environment. This study specifically investigates this process in games played through a first person perspective with the intention of minimising the amount of visual information provided the participants. For this purpose we created two scenarios within a videogame environment specifically design for the study. A total of thirteen participants took part in the study, and after each season a semi structured interview was performed. In a qualitative content analysis we identified patterns and commonalities ascertaining to our line of questioning, and conclude that while the player-presence relationship would appear to be largely dependent on the individual’s type of play, the varying focus on either narratology or ludology in our two scenarios did indeed influence the participants to approach this relationship similarly within the separate groups. Finally we defined four types of player-presence relationship, and how they can be said to relate to the varying ludonarrative dynamics within the two specified genres, as well as the varying types of play observed amongst the participants in our study.
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The narrative account of personal experience in Northern SothoTalane, Refiloe Mabolatse 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis is a narration of personal experiences of the Northern Sotho people and their
way of doing their activities. The Northern Sotho people and their ways of doing things
have been characterized by a proliferation of different ways of living governance. This
living governance is by people who are a distance from the Northern Sotho way of living
that has been influenced by day to day changes of technology and the style of living,
whereby people can do anything to can fit in the current lifestyle.
The problem experienced in relation to accounts is how accounts impact on us and visa
versa. The Northern Sotho narration dates back from the pre-colonial, colonial and
apartheid era. These linear stages of governance have had an influence in the
transformation of the Northern Sotho. This transformation has seen a delusion of the
original Northern Sotho discourses.
A mixture of different cultures in the process of transformation has also characterized this,
where the Northern Sotho people have adopted other tribes’ norms and values; in the
process losing their own original identity. Other tribes have also lost their original ways of
doing things by absorbing Northern Sotho norms and values.
The findings of research will determine how difficult it is to transform original cultures to the
most dominant culture of today, which is more westernized. People will analyze the
findings influential in doing self-introspection, which will assist in determining oneself.
The recommendation that could be given would be that one need to look back at the
importance of cultural values from where he or she comes and to make it fit into today’s
life as this will prevent uncertainties and assist in building the current and next generation’s
future. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: gemeenskap en hul manier om met hul aktiwiteite te handel. Die Noord-Sotho
gemeenskap en hul manier om dinge te handel word gekenmerk deur ‘n vinnige toename
in die diverse invloede deur mense wat verskillende lewenswyse as hul eie het. Hierdie
lewenwyse word gekenmerk deur die vinnige ontwikkelende tegnologie en lewenstyl
waarvolgens mense enigiets kan doen om in die hedendaagse maniere om dinge te doen
in te pas.
Ondervindinge in verhouding met die beskrywings is hoe die beskrywings ons beinvloed
en andersom. Die Noord Sotho vertelling is gedateer vanaf die prekoloniale-, koloniale-,
apartheid- en pos-apartheid eras. Hierdie liniere fases van magsuitoefening het ‘n invloed
gehad in die transformasie van die Noord Sotho. Hierdie transformasie het gesien tot die
verkeerde ideé van die oorspronklike kommunikasies van Noord-Sotho lewenswyse.
‘n Mengsel van verskillende kulture in die proses van transformasie het ook hierdeur
kenmerk, waar die Noord Sotho bevolking ander stamme se norme en waardes
aangeneem het en sodoende hul oorspronklike identiteit verloor het. Ander stamme het
ook hul oorspronklike manier om hul dinge te doen verloor deur dat hulle norme en
waarders van die Noord –Sotho geabsobeer het.
Die navorsings bevindinge sal bepaal hoe moeilik dit is om suiwer kulture te omvorm tot
die mees dominante hedendaagse kultuur wat meer verwesters is. Mense sal die
bevindinge analiseer wat op instrospeksie impakteer en selfbeeld bepaal.
Die aanbeiling is dat die historiese belangrikheid van die kulturele waardes in ag geneem
moet word as die basis waar ons vandaan kom en dat ons dit in werking moet stel in die
hedendaagse lewe. Dit sal onsekerhede voorkom en ook help om die toekoms van die
huidige en toekomstige generasies te bou. / KAKARETŠO: Ke kanego ka ga bophelo bja batho ba Sesotho sa Leboa le mediro ya bona. Mekgwa le
mediro yeo e akaretšago bophelo ka bophara bja setšo sa Leboa e hweditšwe ke mebušo
yeo e bušago. Mebušo yeo le yona e hweditšwe ke diphetogo tša tšatši ka tšatši tša
setekiniki le bophelo bja selehono moo batho ba lekanago ka maatla go ka ikhwetša ba
kgona go phela maemong a selehono.
Ditlhalošo tša setšo sa Leboa di balelwa go tloga mehleng ya pele ga koloni, ka nako ya
kgatelelo le ka morago ga kgatelelo. Nakong tše ka moka tša go fapafapana, mebušo ya
gona e bile le khuetšo e kgolo setšong sa leboa.
Go lekana ga ditšo tša go fapafapana diphetogong setšong le gona go amile dipheto
setšong sa batho ba Leboa gomme ba thoma go loba boitšhupo bja botšo. Merafe e
mengwe le yona e lahlegetšwe ke botšo ka go latela ditlwaedi le mekgwa ya Sesotho sa
Leboa.
Go ya ka dinyakišišo, go nale sešupo sa gore ga go bonolo go ka fetoga setšong sa
bogologolo go fetogela go setšo sa sebjale seo se tibilego ka mekgwa ya sekgowa. Batho
ba tla lebeledišiša ditšhupetšo tšeo di nago le khuetšo ya go inyaka le go inyakišiša, e lego
seo se tla thušago motho gore a te tsebe.
Kakanyo yeo e ka tlišago phetogo ke ge go ka lebelelwa morago botsong bja setšo. Go
lebelelwe ka moo se bego se hlomphiwa ka gona e bile se latelelwa gomme go be le
tlhotleletšo ya gore se šomišwe bophelong bja selehono. Tlhotleletšo ye e ka thibela
dipelaelo le go thuša go aga bokamoso bja meloko ya lehono le yeo e sa tlago.
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Identitätskonstruktion und Verfasserreferenz in deutschen und US-amerikanischen wissenschaftlichen Artikeln / Identity Construction and Authorial Reference in German and US-American Academic ArticlesSchmidt, Julia 06 October 2014 (has links)
Diese Arbeit untersucht die Konstruktion von Autoridentitäten am Beispiel eines Korpus aus 25 deutschen und 25 US-amerikanischen wissenschaftlichen Artikeln aus dem Fach Soziologie, die in den beiden führenden Fachzeitschriften der Länder veröffentlicht wurden. Am Gebrauch der ersten Pronomen der Person in Kombination mit den ihnen zugeordneten Verben wird nachgezeichnet und verglichen, welche Rollen sich die deutschen und US-amerikanischen Autoren in ihren Texten zuschreiben. Dabei werden sowohl quantitativ als auch qualitativ weitreichende Unterschiede deutlich, die auf grundlegend unterschiedliche Konventionen, wie in den beiden Wissenschaftskulturen wissenschaftliche glaubwürdige Autorenidentitäten konstruiert werden, hindeuten. Weitergehend wird an einer Fallstudie gezeigt, dass diese Konventionen zwar nachweisbar, aber dennoch nicht notwendigerweise bindend sind, da erfahrene Autoren dennoch in der Lage sind, eine glaubwürdige Autorenidentität zu konstruieren, auch wenn sie umfassend gegen diese Konventionen verstoßen. Dies wird anhand einer Fallstudie belegt.
Weitergehend werden die Ergebnisse im Rahmen des Impression Managements in einem sozialpsychologischen Kontext betrachtet und abschließend in ihrem Nutzen für die Schreibdidaktik diskutiert.
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Zobrazení rodiny v románech Intimacy (Hanif Kureishi), Scissors Paper Stone (Elizabeth Day) / The portrayal of family in Hanif Kureishi's Intimacy and Elizabeth Day's Scissors Paper StoneBalážová, Anna January 2014 (has links)
This thesis concentrates on the depiction of family in two contemporary British novels. These are: Hanif Kureishiʼs In macy (1998), wri en in the first person narra ve, and Elizabeth Day's Scissors Paper Stone (2011), written in the third person narrative. This thesis analyses the novels from various perspectives with the main emphasis put on the theme of family. It also takes into consideration the different narrative modes used in the novels. In the theoretical part this thesis concentrates on the development of family with the main stress placed on the changes that took place in the second half of the twentieth century in Britain. The topics that it deals with are the breakdown of a relationship, fatherhood, dysfunctional communication and other themes concerning the family and interpersonal relationships.
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Narratives in a drug court settingKeller, Anna Catherina Maria 01 January 2006 (has links)
The purpose of the project is to develop and evaluate a writing unit that could be used to teach adult students in a drug court program. The project is based on theories behind narrative therapy, its use in the treatment of persons with addiction problems, and how the reframing of students' own life stories through writing can bring about change. By using writing prompts as both therapeutic and educational tools, the author hoped to improve the students' life-coping skills and their writing abilities. The unit consists of paragraph writing, essay writing, reflective writing that focused on past events, and using computers to compose and format texts. The author evaluated a preliminary draft of the unit by submitting it to four education professionals with a questionnaire. Data was also collected from the author's students by means of surveys, interviews, and writing samples. Feedback from the professionals and the students guided the revision of the unit. The questionnaire, survey, and interview questions used in the project and the preliminary and final revised drafts of the teaching unit are included.
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Living in Two Worlds: Intentional Personal Development of Autistic IndividualsVuletic, Ljiljana 17 February 2011 (has links)
Despite an increased interest in autism over the last decades, little research exists about life outcomes of autistic adults. The earliest follow-up studies of autistic individuals suggested that self- understanding and conscious efforts to change could be crucial factors in successfully reaching good life outcomes. However, these initial suggestions have not been further investigated. Therefore, this exploratory qualitative study examined the lives of eight highfunctioning autistic adults aged 25 to 63, from their own perspectives, through in-depth, semistructured interviews, to consider the relation of self-understanding and conscious efforts to change—in this study referred to as intentional personal development—to their life outcomes.
All participants demonstrated a level of self-understanding beyond what would be predicted by current theoretical models of autism. Their self-understanding was assessed through participants’ self-definitions, meaning-making of life experiences, and understanding of emotions. In their self-definitions, the participants emphasized their abilities and personality characteristics, rather than their disabilities. For their self-defining memories, as indicators of their meaning making of life experiences, most participants chose positive experiences related to their personal development. Their autobiographical accounts revealed that most participants possess a large iii
repertoire of emotion words, supporting an understanding of emotions. When a good life
outcome is defined traditionally—as being employed, living independently, and having social relationships—this study, contrary to expectations, did not provide overwhelming evidence for the significant role of intentional personal development in achieving this. However, when a good life outcome is defined in terms of achieving personal excellence, then the study did provide confirmation of intentionality as important to attaining good life outcomes. This study therefore suggests that traditional life outcome measures are inadequate for assessing the life outcomes of
autistic individuals because such measures do not take into account the individuals’ own sense of satisfaction with themselves and with their lives.
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Living in Two Worlds: Intentional Personal Development of Autistic IndividualsVuletic, Ljiljana 17 February 2011 (has links)
Despite an increased interest in autism over the last decades, little research exists about life outcomes of autistic adults. The earliest follow-up studies of autistic individuals suggested that self- understanding and conscious efforts to change could be crucial factors in successfully reaching good life outcomes. However, these initial suggestions have not been further investigated. Therefore, this exploratory qualitative study examined the lives of eight highfunctioning autistic adults aged 25 to 63, from their own perspectives, through in-depth, semistructured interviews, to consider the relation of self-understanding and conscious efforts to change—in this study referred to as intentional personal development—to their life outcomes.
All participants demonstrated a level of self-understanding beyond what would be predicted by current theoretical models of autism. Their self-understanding was assessed through participants’ self-definitions, meaning-making of life experiences, and understanding of emotions. In their self-definitions, the participants emphasized their abilities and personality characteristics, rather than their disabilities. For their self-defining memories, as indicators of their meaning making of life experiences, most participants chose positive experiences related to their personal development. Their autobiographical accounts revealed that most participants possess a large iii
repertoire of emotion words, supporting an understanding of emotions. When a good life
outcome is defined traditionally—as being employed, living independently, and having social relationships—this study, contrary to expectations, did not provide overwhelming evidence for the significant role of intentional personal development in achieving this. However, when a good life outcome is defined in terms of achieving personal excellence, then the study did provide confirmation of intentionality as important to attaining good life outcomes. This study therefore suggests that traditional life outcome measures are inadequate for assessing the life outcomes of
autistic individuals because such measures do not take into account the individuals’ own sense of satisfaction with themselves and with their lives.
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Learning descriptive models of objects and activities from egocentric videoFathi, Alireza 29 August 2013 (has links)
Recent advances in camera technology have made it possible to build a comfortable, wearable system which can capture the scene in front of the user throughout the day. Products based on this technology, such as GoPro and Google Glass, have generated substantial interest. In this thesis, I present my work on egocentric vision, which leverages wearable camera technology and provides a new line of attack on classical computer vision problems such as object categorization and activity recognition.
The dominant paradigm for object and activity recognition over the last decade has been based on using the web. In this paradigm, in order to learn a model for an object category like coffee jar, various images of that object type are fetched from the web (e.g. through Google image search), features are extracted and then classifiers are learned. This paradigm has led to great advances in the field and has produced state-of-the-art results for object recognition. However, it has two main shortcomings: a) objects on the web appear in isolation and they miss the context of daily usage; and b) web data does not represent what we see every day.
In this thesis, I demonstrate that egocentric vision can address these limitations as an alternative paradigm. I will demonstrate that contextual cues and the actions of a user can be exploited in an egocentric vision system to learn models of objects under very weak supervision. In addition, I will show that measurements of a subject's gaze during object manipulation tasks can provide novel feature representations to support activity recognition. Moving beyond surface-level categorization, I will showcase a method for automatically discovering object state changes during actions, and an approach to building descriptive models of social interactions between groups of individuals. These new capabilities for egocentric video analysis will enable new applications in life logging, elder care, human-robot interaction, developmental screening, augmented reality and social media.
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Studies in Swedish Sign Language : Reference, Real Space Blending, and InterpretationNilsson, Anna-Lena January 2010 (has links)
This thesis comprises four separate studies of the same material: a ten-minute Swedish Sign Language monologue. Study I describes the form, meaning, and use of the sign INDEX-c, a pointing toward the chest traditionally described as a first person pronoun. It is argued that INDEX-c is used not only with specific reference to the signer or a quoted signer, but also with non-specific reference. Contrary to what has been reported, INDEX-c is used not only for constructed dialogue, but also in constructed action. The analysis reveals two separate forms, as well, labeled as reduced INDEX-c and distinct INDEX-c, respectively. Study II describes the activities of the non-dominant hand when it is not part of a two-handed sign. A continuum is suggested, moving from different rest positions that do not contribute to the discourse content, via mirroring of the dominant hand, for example, to instances where the non-dominant hand produces signs of its own while the dominant hand remains inactive, i.e. dominance reversal. Several of the activities of the non-dominant hand, including the four types of buoys that are described, help structure the discourse by indicating the current topic. Study III uses Mental Space Theory and Conceptual Blending Theory to describe the use of signing space for reference. A correlation is shown between discourse content and the area in the signing space toward which signs are meaningfully directed, and also between these directions and which types of Real Space blends the signer mainly uses: token blends or surrogate blends. Finally Study IV looks in more detail at three segments of the discourse and their Real Space blend structure. An initial analysis of eight interpretations into spoken Swedish is also conducted, focusing on whether preselected content units (discourse entities and relations) are identified. A large number of Real Space blends and blended entities are argued to result in less successful renditions measured in terms of preselected content units. / För att köpa boken skicka en beställning till exp@ling.su.se/ To order the book send an e-mail to exp@ling.su.se
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Naturalizace vědomí a smysl subjektivity / The Naturalization of Consciousness and the Meaning of SubjectivityToráčová, Pavla January 2014 (has links)
The thesis deals with the problem of the existence of consciousness in the physical world. It denies the approach that is prevailing in the contemporary philosophy of mind that treats the phenomenal consciousness and intentionality separately. The position held in this thesis is to claim that the phenomenal character of consciousness and intentionality are inseparable and that it is impossible to understand the former without understanding the latter, and vice versa. The problem of the existence of consciousness in the physical world is viewed as the problem of the existence of (conscious) intentionality in the physical world. With the aim to achieve an analysis of intentionality that would keep its phenomenal character and the first person point of view, and, at the same time, shed light on its realization in the physical world, thoughts of Peter Strawson, G. E. M. Anscombe, Tim Crane, Colin McGinn and John Searle are discussed. The result is an outline of intentionality that allows to explain the fundamental level of intentionality as a physical process and the higher levels of intentionality as a development of the fundamental level. Two principles are crucial for this approach: the development of intentionality from the fundamental level to the higher level is comprehensible only if we keep the...
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