Title
Gathering Self-Report Data in Games Through NPC Dialogues: Effects on Data Quality, Data Quantity, Player Experience, and Information Intimacy
Abstract
ABSTRACT Self-report assessment is important for research and game development, e.g., to gather data during play. Games can use dialogues with non-player characters (NPCs) to gather self-report data; however, players might respond differently to dialogues than questionnaires. Without guidance on how in-game assessment affects player perceptions and experiences, designers and researchers are in danger of making decisions that harm data quantity and quality, and perceptions of privacy. We conducted a user study to understand self-report collection from NPC dialogues and traditional in-game overlay questionnaires. Data quality and player experience measures autonomy, curiosity, immersion, and mastery did not differ significantly, although NPC dialogues enhanced meaning. NPC dialogues supported an increase in data quantity through voluntary 5-point scales but not via open responses; however, they also increased the perceived intimacy of shared information despite comparable objective intimacy. NPC dialogues are useful to gather quantitative self-report data. They enable a meaningful play experience but could facilitate negative effects related to privacy.
Year
DOI
Venue
2021
10.1145/3411764.3445411
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Keywords
DocType
Citations 
self-reports, questionnaires, non-player character, NPC, player experience, intimacy, games user research, GUR, surveys
Conference
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Julian Frommel16610.70
Cody J. Phillips2454.80
Regan L. Mandryk32875219.60