Tygron for Scientific Research

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Use-case 4: “the Virtual River Game”

This page of the manual is still under development. The final version will be launched on April 8th 2021 during the EDU event 2021.

A PhD candidate at the University of Twente was assigned to create a serious gaming environment for river interventions as a tool that facilitates stakeholder engagement. The research was one among 20 projects as part of the RiverCare research program. The researcher is a human-centered interface designer, and is not an expert in river interventions. After developing and testing several prototypes, the researcher created the the virtual river game, a unique board-game that is digitally connected to the Tygron platform. To simulate river interventions, players can move the pieces on the board, and immediately see the changes on the Tygron screen including the new map, as well as numerical calculations and graphs.

The board component of the Virtual River Game

Content of the Research

General information

Objectives and desired outcome

The main objective of the research is to create a virtual game that allows players to interact with an imaginary river section.

The game would allow different stakeholder groups to:

  • learn about each others' perspectives regarding river management
  • take better decisions of river interventions
  • reflect upon the potential effects of those interventions

To do that, the researcher is expected to:

  • develop and test a serious virtual game where players experience how river systems function.
  • write a dissertation paper

Research process

The game was developed based on a need-driven approach Who was involved: The supervisors were involved - professor in human-centered design + professor in Hydraulic engineering post-doc involved for discussions during the process As for the game: Florian + Hansje for the feedback Practically, connecting the board to the game: Rudolf Deltares: Fedor Baart (co-author) - coding expertise and modeling expertise Other researchers


Time distribution

The research was designed for a 4 year programme, however the researcher did it within 5 years, on a 4-days a week basis, since he was employed by the university 1 day/week. In this case, the initial research was very time-intensive, taking up to 3 years. This phase included intermediate prototypes. 3 prototypes were formally tested. The rest (2 years) were the development of the game (prototyping) and testing. The testing included test sessions with stakeholders. 5 sessions were organized at the end of the research phase, and all took place within 6 weeks. Afterwards more sessions were organized but unfortunately they stopped due to the covid lockdown.

Resources

The researcher did not have experience in GIS or geodesign or coding Limited programming/coding base + course along the way. Design methods Practical side - making the board - CAD laser cutting. Masters in Industrial Design Engineering (utwente)

The researcher had to learn how to use Tygron He received some training from the Tygron team. He visited the Tygron office for 2 full days in the beginning. Part of it was a discussion about the project: What can and cannot be done with Tygron. That was followed by a few visits to discuss the links between Tygron and the board game.

The researcher also relied on the web-based form of the API as well as the wiki.

Using Tygron

The Virtual River Game's hardware and software.

API (Application Programmers Interface)

The physical set-up of the virtual river game including the physical board, touchscreen monitor, projector, and webcam.

Outcome of the research

video1 video2


You can find the full research paper here: The Virtual River Game: Gaming using models to collaboratively explore river management complexity

You can find the summary poster of the project here: File:Summary poster - virtual river game.pdf

Feedback and recommendations

-The researcher recommends 3rd parties to create added value (what is actually needed) - Also involving 3rd parties is important for practical expertise and knowledge

Contact

For more information about this PhD research, you can contact us at: info@Tygron.com

You can also contact Robert-Jan den Haan, researcher at the University of Twente at: r.j.denhaan@utwente.nl

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