Self-Determination Theory and HCI Games Research: Unfulfilled Promises and Unquestioned Paradigms

April Tyack, Elisa Mekler

Research output: Journal Article or Conference Article in JournalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Self-determination theory (SDT), a psychological theory of human motivation, is a prominent paradigm in human-computer interaction (HCI) research on games. However, our prior literature review observed a trend towards shallow applications of the theory. This follow-up work takes a broader view – examining SDT scholarship on games, a wider corpus of SDT-based HCI games research (N=259), and perspectives from a games industry practitioner conference – to help explain current applications of SDT. Our findings suggest that perfunctory applications of the theory in HCI games research originate in part from within SDT scholarship on games, which itself exhibits limited engagement with theoretical tenets. Against this backdrop, we unpack the popularity of SDT in HCI games research and identify conditions underlying the theory’s current
use as an oft-unquestioned paradigm. Finally, we outline avenues for more productive SDT-informed games research and consider ways towards more intentional practices of theory use in HCI.
Original languageEnglish
JournalACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
ISSN1073-0516
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Empirical studies in HCI
  • Computer games
  • HCI theory
  • Human-centered computing , concepts and models
  • Applied computing

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