Pathfinder: The Behavioural and Motivational Effects of Collectibles in Gamified Software Training

Tim Naglé, Scott Bateman, Max V. Birk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)
92 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Designers of instructional software use gamification to help motivate and engage learners. Typically focusing on gamifying a single task, designers aim to provide a straightforward path through learning. In contrast, video games frequently provide optional secondary tasks using collectibles. Collectibles-like coins-are secondary, non-essential goals that encourage players to selectively take on additional challenges and engage more with a game. While research supports the idea that by increasing engagement learning can be improved, exactly how collectibles-an extremely common element in games-might be employed in gamified learning and how it might affect the play experience is underexplored. We present the results of a study comparing a gamified photo-editing training game that uses collectibles to one without collectibles. Our results show that learners choose to engage more when collectibles are present, and that this has a positive effect on software skills applied to a representative out-of-game challenge. Our findings provide a nuanced view of the tradeoffs in motivation and experience when collectibles are used.
Original languageEnglish
Article number264
Number of pages22
JournalProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
Volume5
Issue numberCHI PLAY
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Oct 2021
Event8th ACM SIGCHI Annual Symposium on Computer-Human Interaction in Play, CHI PLAY 2021 - Virtual
Duration: 18 Oct 202121 Oct 2021
Conference number: 8
https://chiplay.acm.org/2021/

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