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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Playing by the rules : towards a gameplay framework of creativity in design

Venter, Morné Pierre January 2017 (has links)
Creativity plays an important part in design and problem-solving. While the role of play has enjoyed a great deal of attention in the study of both creativity and problem-solving alike, the overlap between games and the creative problem-solving process has not enjoyed much scholarly attention. This dissertation therefore focuses on exploring the overlap between games and the creative problem-solving process. This exploration seeks to enhance the manner in which the role and function of gameplay within the creative problem-solving process is understood. This study is approached from the viewpoint of a thorough literature review and synthesises insights from design discourse, creativity studies and game design literature. Firstly, this study demonstrates the systemic similarities between games and creative problems. These similarities prove that both systems are capable of generating or allowing the emergence of gameplay. The second aspect focused on is the manner in which gameplay emerges from creative problem-solving and the value that it holds for that process. The third aspect focused on is the role and function of rules in both games and problem-solving in eliciting gameplay. These explorations culminate in a rudimentary framework that describes the manner in which the rules and limitations in a creative problem become established in order to allow gameplay to emerge. Lastly, the paper explores the psychological factors inherent in eliciting gameplay from a creative problem in the form of adopting a lusory attitude. The study ultimately demonstrates the crucial role of gameplay in creative problem-solving and the aspects that influence its emergence. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2017. / Visual Arts / MA / Unrestricted
2

Three essays in dynamic macroeconomics

Holden, Thomas January 2012 (has links)
This thesis presents three papers within the field of dynamic macroeconomics. The first paper, entitled “Medium-frequency cycles and the remarkable near trend-stationarity of output”, presents a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model with endogenous growth, capable of reconciling the observed large medium-frequency fluctuations in output, with its long run (near) trend-stationarity. This requires a model in which standard business cycle shocks lead to highly persistent movements around trend, without significantly altering the trend itself. The robustness of the trend also requires that scale effects are eliminated both in the long and short runs. In an estimated version of the model, a financial-type shock to the stock of ideas emerges as the key driver of the medium frequency cycle. The second paper, entitled “Learning from learners”, is an intervention into two long running debates: the first, on whether learnability may be used to rule out explosive paths for inflation in New Keynesian models, and the second, into whether Taylor rule parameters may be identified from observing the data. We find that in an economy populated with traditional macroeconomic learners, Taylor rule parameters can always be identified by sophisticated econometric techniques. Furthermore, when all agents in the economy use such sophisticated techniques, stationary sunspot solutions are readily learnable, and there is no guarantee of convergence to a stationary solution even in the “determinate” case. This implies that learnability cannot be used for equilibrium selection. Finally, in the third paper, “Efficient simulation of DSGE models with inequality constraints” (joint with Michael Paetz), we present a new algorithm for the simulation of models subject to inequality constraints, such as the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates. Our algorithm is shown to deliver higher accuracy than all other non-global algorithms, and leading speed. We go on to provide a number of applications of our algorithm.

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