Authoring, its tools, processes, and design challenges are key issues for the Interactive Digital Narrative (IDN) research community. The complexity of IDN authoring, often involving stories co-created by procedures and user interaction, creates confusion for tool developers and raises barriers for new authors.This book examines these issues from both the tool designer and the author’s perspective, discusses the poetics of IDN and how that can be used to design authoring tools, explores diverse forms of IDN and their demands, and investigates the challenges around conducting research on IDN authoring.To address these challenges, the chapter authors incorporate a range of interdisciplinary perspectives on ‘The Authoring Problem’ in IDN. While existing texts provide ‘how-to’ guidance for authors, this book is a primer for research and practice-based investigations into the authoring problem, collecting the latest thoughts about this area from key researchers and practitioners.
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Introduction.- Part I. Authors and Processes.- Understanding the Process of Authoring.- Interactive Digital Narrative: The Genealogy of a Field.- Authorial Burden.- We Make How We Learn: The role of Community in Authoring Tool Longevity.- The Authoring Problem is a Publishing Problem.- Part II. Content.- Getting Creative with Actions.- Authoring Interactive Narrative Meets Narrative Interaction Design.- Writing for Replay: Supporting the Authoring of Kaleidoscopic Interactive Narratives.- Strange Patterns: Structure and Post-structure in Interactive Digital Narratives.- Mapping the Unmappable: Reimagining Visual Representations of Interactive Narrative.- On Story.- Part III. Form.- Authoring for Story Sifters.- Authoring Locative Narratives - Lessons Learned and Future Visions.- Shower Curtains of the Mind.- Game Mechanics as Narrative Mode.- Working with Intelligent Narrative Technologies.- Part IV. Research Issues.-  Authoring Issues in Interdisciplinary Research Teams.- The Authoring Tool Evaluation Problem.- Quantitative Analysis of Emergent Narratives.- An Ethics Framework for Interactive Digital Narrative Authoring.
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Authoring, its tools, processes, and design challenges are key issues for the Interactive Digital Narrative (IDN) research community. The complexity of IDN authoring, often involving stories co-created by procedures and user interaction, creates confusion for tool developers and raises barriers for new authors.This book examines these issues from both the tool designer and the author’s perspective, discusses the poetics of IDN and how that can be used to design authoring tools, explores diverse forms of IDN and their demands, and investigates the challenges around conducting research on IDN authoring.To address these challenges, the chapter authors incorporate a range of interdisciplinary perspectives on ‘The Authoring Problem’ in IDN. While existing texts provide ‘how-to’ guidance for authors, this book is a primer for research and practice-based investigations into the authoring problem, collecting the latest thoughts about this area from key researchers and practitioners.
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Addresses research challenges involved in the abiding problem of supporting the process of authoring interactive stories Incorporates views from a wide range of academics and practitioners, bridging the gaps between these two communities Brings together the open challenges and unanswered questions in one volume for the first time
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031052163
Publisert
2024-01-03
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer International Publishing AG
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

Dr. Charlie Hargood is an academic in games technology in the department of creative technology at Bournemouth University. He is an internationally recognised expert in interactive narrative and Hypertext. He has long been a contributor to the ACM Hypertext conference where he runs the Narrative and Hypertext workshop, and has twice won the Englebert prize for Hypertext research. His recent research has focused on locative narrative and the UX of authoring tools and he was the technical lead of the StoryPlaces project.
Dr. David Millard is Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southampton, UK. A leading figure in the Hypertext community, he has over 240 publications in international conferences and journals, was Vice-Chair of ACM SIGWEB from 2015-2019, and is the current chair of the ACM Hypertext steering committee. He has won awards for his work on hypertext structures and authoring, and his current research interests are focused on hypertextual structures in games, locative literature, and digital narratives.
Dr. Alex Mitchell teaches game and UX design and interactive storytelling in the Department of Communications and New Media at the National University of Singapore. His research investigates various aspects of computer-based art and entertainment. His recent work has explored the role of defamiliarization in gameplay, and motivations for replaying interactive stories. He is a founding executive board member of ARDIN (Association for Research in Digital Interactive Narrative).
Dr. Ulrike Spierling is a professor of Media Design at the RheinMain University of Applied Sciences in Wiesbaden, Germany. She has been leading research groups in Interactive Storytelling since 1998, with applied research and development projects tackling interactions with virtual characters, conversational user interfaces, chatbot-based storytelling, as well as location-based interactive drama in Augmented Reality. She has organized several international workshops on Authoring for Interactive Narrative since 2006, and co-founded the annual conference series ICIDS (International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling) in 2008.