'Warcraft' Helps Swine Flu Researchers
May 3, 2009
By ANTHONY BARTKEWICZ
A disease pandemic in the online role-playing game "World of Warcraft" is helping researchers get a handle on the real-life spread of swine flu. Canada.com reports that players' reaction to the "Warcraft" pandemic shows researchers a more realistic picture of how pandemics spread than computer models can provide.
In 2005, "World of Warcraft" publisher Blizzard Entertainment introduced a virus called "Corrupted Blood" into the game world that players' characters could pass along to one another. A quarantine was ordered for infected characters, but many players ignored it and continued to interact with one another. Eventually, the virus was spread to more than four million characters.
"Suddenly, there did exist an experimental framework to watch how people would behave during an epidemic," said Nina Fefferman, assistant professor at the Center for Discreet Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science at Rutgers University in New Jersey.
Fefferman and a colleague published a study on the "Corrupted Blood" outbreak in the Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal. They are currently consulting with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on human behavior during pandemics. "We don't expect people to behave the same way in a virtual world, but it's closer than asking them hypothetical questions," Fefferman said.
"World of Warcraft" actually contains swine flu -- in the form of a spell of the same name -- which also has a chance of triggering an outbreak in the game world.
Source :
http://www.myfoxchattanooga.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=8419558&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.5.1
How to stop swine flu pandemic? - World of Warcraft helps
May 2, 2009
By Dave Parrack
Run for your lives - swine flu is here! That’s the kind of headline the media has effectively been trumping over the last week or so. But behind the hysterical facade there are people actually trying to figure out how to counter the possible pandemic. And they’re finding help from the unlikeliest of sources.
If you haven’t heard of swine flu by now then you’re either very stupid or very out of the loop. Either way, you’re probably one of the lucky ones. The threat of a pandemic is very real, but as we’ve already seen, the amount of scaremongering and hand wringing over the virus and its spread around the world has been over-the-top and full of misinformation.
Behind the scenes is a different matter, with governments, health workers and researchers working hard to track the virus and if possible slow or stop its spread around the world. Believe it or not, the MMORPG (Massive Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game) World of Warcraft or WoW is helping.
Canada.com reports that in 2005, a virtual virus tore through the WoW landscape infecting millions of players. It acted in the same way as a real-life plague would, spreading and killing as it traveled around the in-game world. An estimated 6 million of the 6 million players (at the time) were infected, with many of their characters dying as a result.
The virus (Corrupted Blood) was created by the people at Blizzard Entertainment, the makers of the game, in order to weaken some of the overly-powerful characters in the game. Unfortunately the virus also infected any characters who came into contact with these players, no matter what level they were at. The result? Mass carnage.
Blizzard imposed a quarantine to try and stop the spread of the virus but even that failed to do much good. Many players ignored the quarantine completely, while others developed immunity but still carried the virus. Others still chose to flee infected parts of the game to save themselves but ultimately helped spread the virus further afield.
Nina Fefferman, co-authored an influential study about the WoW plague with a colleague. Their findings were published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal in 2007, and is now helping real-life organizations include human reactions into their planning for a real-world pandemic. The threat of which is currently posed by swine flu.
There are obviously many differences between an in-game virus and a real virus but the important lesson here is about how humans react to such a crisis. Looking at how World of Warcraft players reacted to such an event is clearly more helpful than guesstimated hypothesis.
And you thought video games were bad for society.
Source :
http://tech.blorge.com/Structure:%20/2009/05/02/how-to-stop-swine-flu-pandemic-world-of-warcraft-helps/