Further Thoughts about First Person Shooter Games
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 12/29/2012 - 19:53Recently, Matthew Katz, a social media savvy doctor I've become friends with put up a blog post, Defending Our Youth: No First Person Shooter Video Games. I've shared his blog post and there has been a very interesting discussion on the topic which I will try and summarize and add my own comments.
Dr. Katz wrote this as part of a larger opus dealing with gun violence from a public health framework. This is an important framework that we should be working within as we try to address issues of gun related violence in the United States.
Much of the discussion around gun control seems to be black and white thinking. Some are suggesting all guns should be illegalized and the second Amendment should be repealed. Others are suggesting that no new gun controls should be put in place, and instead, that more people should carry guns. It seems like the more reasonable viewpoint is somewhere in the middle, where access to certain types of guns should be made much more difficult.
Similarly, there is the discussion about video games. Some people call for banning video games. Others say absolutely not. Dr. Katz seems to come closer to a more reasonable middle ground by looking at access to a specific set of video games, first person shooter games.
I am a big proponent of gaming. I believe we should be using ramification to change many aspects of our society and I hope to write more about some of these ideas later. Games, like guns, are tools. They can be used a lot of different ways.
So, with that, let me get to some of the comments I received on my Facebook wall about Dr. Katz's blog post. Much of the discussion has been around different types of games, some not even video games. I played a lot of Dungeons and Dragons back in the 1970s. At that point, it was paper, pencils, dice and a lot of imagination. Yes, there was violence in the game, but it was a small part of the game. What mattered was creativity, problem solving, and collaboration; some of the twenty-first century skills I've been writing about.
My brother posted a link to a video about a Veterinary Medical Class that took place in Second Life. It is a fascinating video and a great illustration of the positive aspect of video game like activity. One person posted a link to the article, Ten-country comparison suggests there’s little or no link between video games and gun murders. Dr. Katz properly points out that this is a study of video games in general, and not violent video games, or even more specifically first person shooter games.
Yet I'll even go so far as to suggest that there can be some benefit to first person shooter games. Re-enactment of a traumatic event can be an important part of processing the horror, whether it be young kids playing with toy guns after Newtown, or veterans spending time in virtual worlds to learn to cope with PTSD. Perhaps the real question is, what are you getting out of the games you are playing.
This ties back to some of the discussions I've been having at the CT Health Foundation Health Leadership Fellows Program about intent and impact. What are you intending to get out of your games and what impact is it really having?
One intent may be simply to relax and unwind. That is an important thing to seek. The question becomes, is this the most effective way to relax and unwind? Are their other, unintended side effects that are detrimental? Might these detrimental side effects indicate there are other ways to relax and unwind that might be more beneficial?
I also like to come back to Jane McGonigal's TED talks about gaming. What sort of societal change is the gaming having? How is it affecting your resilience; mental, emotional, and social?
For the seventh grade boys playing first person shooter games, what sort of effect is that having? The research Dr. Katz talks about suggests it may not be all that beneficial. So, how do we address this? Do we ban first person shooter games? Do we make it harder for kids to access them? Do we put warning labels on them? Do we train parents, teachers and even doctors about them?
For example, my eleven year old daughter was asked at her latest physical about if she always wore her seat belt, if there were people around her that smoked, and if there were guns in any houses she went to. She was also asked about playing video games.
Now there are some people who have tried to prohibit doctors from asking their patients about gun safety, and I imagine if more doctors start asking about video game safety, that might get a similar response, but that is something that primary care providers interested in dealing with gun violence from a public health perspective could start asking patients about. It would be a simple start, without requiring new legislation. Twelve years ago, the American Academy of Pediatrics came out a Joint Statement on the Impact of Entertainment Violence on Children. As part of releasing that statement they stated they hoped to "encourage greater public and parental awareness of the harms of violent entertainment, and encourage a more honest dialogue about what can be done to enhance the health and well-being of America's children". It sure seems like such a dialog is long overdue.
Goals for 2013
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 12/28/2012 - 12:16A month ago, I wrote a blog post about setting "S.M.A.R.T." goals about my personal leadership as part of the CT Health Leaders Fellowship program. S.M.A.R.T. is an abbreviation for Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Timely. As we approach the New Year, it is timely to set goals, but the other parts remain elusive. I’ve always been a bit goal adverse.
Perhaps some of this comes from a story I have a strong memory of from college. A philosophy professor told my class about when he had led a bunch of students on a pilgrimage from Paris to Santiago. They retraced the route of pilgrims from medieval times. It was a deeply meaningful experience for many of the students on the trip, and upon their return, they visited various alumni association meetings.
At one such meeting, an older alumnus got up and shook his finger at one of the students saying, “You know what’s wrong with you? You don’t have any goals!”
The student responded, “No, I have one goal: to live each day more fully and more lovingly than the previous”. I have often told that story when asked about my goals. It fits well with my interrupt driven ADD lifestyle.
This is not very specific, and perhaps not especially measurable, but very relevant, timely, and I believe achievable. My friends at the CT Health Foundation might ask, “So, how’s that really going for you? Are you being as successful and effective in this as possible?”
I would like to think so, but I don’t really know, and I suspect there are aspects where I could be more effective in the over-arching goal. To put it into the language we’ve been using in the fellowship class, I’m sure there are areas where I am not conscious of my incompetence.
So, I’m trying to break this down into smaller pieces to find skills to work on. One interesting framework to look for skills to work on is the Framework for 21st Century Learning from The Partnership for 21st Century Skills: Creativity and Innovation, Critical Thinking and Problem Solving, and Communication and Collaboration.
Creativity is an area I’ve always been interested in enhancing. This gets a bit more specific, but is also not particularly measurable. What would a measurable goal for creativity be and how would I work on it?
Communications and collaboration is another important area to me. I blog. I tweet, and I collaborate on many media. I could return to an old goal of putting up a blog post daily, or perhaps add in other goals, like putting up a blog post monthly on other sites about health equity or policy issues. An additional possible goal might be to get more interaction with what I’m writing.
Another interesting framework comes from Jane McGonigal’s game that can give you 10 extra years of life:
Please, take some time to watch this video. If you have time, you might want to watch her earlier Ted Talk, Gaming can make a better world before hand.
In her second TED talk, she speaks about four kinds of resilience: physical, mental, emotional and social resilience. These could match with the 21st century skills. Mental resilience as part of nurturing creativity and social resilience as part of improving communications.
So, now my more specific goals start taking better shape. To act upon them, let me propose an idea. If you’ve made it this far, send me an email with your thoughts about what my specific goals should be. What goals do you think would be most beneficial for me. Are their skills that I could be more competent in that I’m perhaps not aware of? For that matter, has this inspired you to think about some of your goals for next year, if so, what are you thinking of doing?
The Hynes 2012 Holiday Quotes
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 12/26/2012 - 10:47I belong to a fairly eclectic, creative, some would say eccentric family, and this is especially noticeable around the holidays. Many humorous, thought provoking or just plain weird things get said around our holiday tables, and this year, I decided to capture some of them via social media.
When I was younger, I always used to carry a notebook around with me, where I could write observations that jumped out at me for one reason or another. This year, I decided to tweet some of the more interesting lines from Christmas morning.
They ended up fitting together very nicely, so, for those who didn’t see them on Facebook or Twitter, or didn’t view them as a whole, here are the Hynes 2012 Holiday Quotes
Of bowties and burquas,
and skin of teddy bear;
it's all very meta
like playing a song
with something that used to be a song,
or the cello guys with TobleroneA slippery slope of maverick jelly beans,
touch screen gloves,
a Santa rubber duckie,
and a modern flint.
It's the holiday of candy fish.Something happens when you talk too much, dad!
And it was the very, very end of the Swedish festival.
Did you get any fish?
I guessed a giant sonic screwdriver because that makes the most sense.
So many things I'm keeping inside my head right nowIs it a Tardis pillow?
I can't believe you guessed that
And how often do you get a bobble head of someone you know?
And what do you do at falcon ridge?
Lie on a blanket.
So what's better than a blanket that's a picture of you lying on a blanket?
Very meta.Brimstone is hard to get
because we live in a blue state.
Now you need to write a song
about the fragility of the universe,
meta picture blankets,
and Doctor Who.Merry Christmas everyone!
Speaker of the 113th House of Congress
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 12/23/2012 - 21:38After Boehner's Plan B failed, reliable sources have started talking about the possibility that Boehner might not be elected speaker of the 113th Congress. For example, Breitbart House Republican members circulate plan to oust Speaker and Wonkette has Scoop! Paul Ryan To Be Next House Speaker, According To Some Secret Random Dude Who Gossiped To Laura Ingraham.
The Breitbart article talks about having a secret ballot to see who would become speaker. Then, conservatives would abandon Boehner and in subsequent ballots, a true conservative could be elected. The people behind closed doors talk about the concern that Pelosi might get elected speaker, but dismisses saying that there wouldn't be seventeen Republicans that would cross the aisle to vote for her.
Yet there is a more interesting possibility. Let's imagine there is a secret vote, and Boehner doesn't get the speakership in the first ballot. It might be that he'd get it on a second ballot after the protest is registered. But, is there another option that might work? What if some moderate Republicans got together with some of the more conservative Democrats to form a "bipartisan governing coalition", similar to what happened in the New York State Senate?
Would a Republican who agrees to do away with the Hastert Rule have a chance at providing the sort of leadership that Boehner has failed to deliver? Are their members of congress from both sides of the aisle talking about what they might be able to do together if Boehner doesn't get re-elected as speaker of the house?
The End of the World (As We Know It)
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 12/21/2012 - 07:47I was having a really weird, mid-apocalyptic dream. I believe Kim and I were living in New York City and headed off to a museum in the Bronx. We stopped at one museum, saw some friends, got on a bus and kept on going. At one place, we stopped to see the remains of an old building where my brother sometimes stayed when he wasn't living on the boat.
We started talking with this young woman and she agreed to drive us up to the museum. We rode through run down streets. As we got close to the museum, we stopped to visit a friend of hers. There were many people in the trashed apartment, good people, who had struggled hard in the Bronx. We had something to drink, chatted, and as we prepared to leave, cue 'Hotel California', we found that we had already died. That this was our afterlife, and we could never leave.
Yet it didn't feel like we had died. We were just at a gathering somewhere.
The alarm went off. I looked at the clock. 6:00. In twelve minutes, it would be the solstice, for some people, the end of the world. Outside, the wind was howling. I figured I could spend the last twelve minutes of the old b'ak'tun snuggling warmly in my bed.
As I got out of bed, I thought, what if the 'apocalypse' has happened? What if everything has changed? Yes, I don't feel any different, the routines haven't changed, but what if something else has, something imperceptible?
My mind went back to the old saying about, what the caterpillar views as the end of the world, the butterfly views as a new beginning. Every day is the opportunity for a new beginning, so let's make this a positive apocalypse.
I checked on Facebook to see what my friends were saying. They were talking about being more involved in their community and their government. People were challenging the NRA to represent the four million members, moms and dads, in their organization, and not the gun sellers. You cannot serve both God and Money. Perhaps that is the real message of Sandy Hook.
Various songs play through my mind as part of the apocalypse play list. Soon, I will shower, and head off to a job I love, a job where I get to use my words to try and help people live healthier, happier lives. Perhaps this is the apocalypse, getting more people to be driven by love for their fellow living beings and not by love for money.