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322

Reconstructing Gaming Disorder: A Taxonomy by Registered Reportuse asterix (*) to get italics
Veli-Matti Karhulahti, Marcel Martončik, Miia Siutila, Solip Park, Yaewon Jin, Matúš Adamkovič, Tiina Auranen, Bora Na, Tae-Jin YoonPlease use the format "First name initials family name" as in "Marie S. Curie, Niels H. D. Bohr, Albert Einstein, John R. R. Tolkien, Donna T. Strickland"
2023
<p style="text-align: justify;">Videogames have become one of the most prevalent cultural forms around the world. While their role in art, pedagogy, and everyday life keeps growing, the health debates on videogame play—gaming—culminated in 2022 with the World Health Organization’s historical inclusion of “gaming disorder” in the International Classification of Diseases. This made gaming, next to gambling, the first and only type of behavior with a diagnostic category of addictive use. The above echoes a greater conflict between culture and human development: how can science address potential problems in intensive technology use, while intensive use is also globally integrated into healthy everyday living? To build a foundation for answering this question, this longitudinal multisite registered report constructs a taxonomy of intensive gaming by three levels: health, design interaction, and phenomenology of play. Based on rich mixed qualitative data (clinical and phenomenological interviews, diary-like entries, gaming logs) generated over three years with intensively gaming participants in Finland, Slovakia, and South Korea (total N=210–300), the study will produce a basis for a taxonomic system that helps distinguishing diverse life scenarios where gaming plays a significant role. As separate programmatic components, the study will additionally yield independent registered case reports based on the outlined methodological framework.&nbsp;</p>
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longitudinal design, medical philosophy, psychiatry, qualitative methods, video games
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Humanities, Medical Sciences, Social sciences
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No need for them to be recommenders of PCI Registered Reports. Please do not suggest reviewers for whom there might be a conflict of interest. Reviewers are not allowed to review preprints written by close colleagues (with whom they have published in the last four years, with whom they have received joint funding in the last four years, or with whom they are currently writing a manuscript, or submitting a grant proposal), or by family members, friends, or anyone for whom bias might affect the nature of the review - see the code of conduct
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2022-10-10 15:09:55
Zoltan Dienes
Oluwaseyi Adeliyi, Abiola Akinnubi