D
de Yaw Yvonne Kort
Researcher at Eindhoven University of Technology
Publications - 53
Citations - 2429
de Yaw Yvonne Kort is an academic researcher from Eindhoven University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alertness & Vitality. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 53 publications receiving 2086 citations.
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The Game Experience Questionnaire
TL;DR: The Game Experience Questionnaire (GEQ) as discussed by the authors assesses game experience as scores on seven components: Immersion, Flow, Competence, Positive and Negative Affect, Tension, and Challenge.
D3.3 : Game Experience Questionnaire:development of a self-report measure to assess the psychological impact of digital games
TL;DR: The Game Experience Questionnaire (GEQ) as mentioned in this paper is a self-report measure that aims to comprehensively and reliably characterise the multifaceted experience of playing digital games, and it has been used extensively in the FUGA project.
Journal ArticleDOI
A higher illuminance induces alertness even during office hours: findings on subjective measures, task performance and heart rate measures.
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that even under normal, i.e., neither sleep nor light deprived conditions, more intense light can improve feelings of alertness and vitality, as well as objective performance and physiological arousal.
Characterising and measuring user experiences in digital games
WA Wijnand IJsselsteijn,de Yaw Yvonne Kort,Karolien Poels,Audrius Jurgelionis,Francesco Bellotti +4 more
TL;DR: The applicability of traditional usability metrics to user-centred game design is discussed, and two prominent concepts, flow and immersion, are highlighted as potential candidates for evaluating gameplay.
Journal ArticleDOI
What's wrong with virtual trees? Restoring from stress in a mediated environment
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the importance of immersion in a mediated environment in relation to restoration and found that more immersive projection would show stronger stress-reducing effects of a mediated restorative environment.