Journal of Virtual Worlds Research

The Journal of Virtual Worlds Research is an online, open access academic journal that adheres to the highest standards of peer review and engages established and emerging scholars from anywhere in the world. The Journal of Virtual Worlds Research is a transdisciplinary journal that engages a wide spectrum of scholarship and welcomes contributions from the many disciplines and approaches that intersect virtual worlds research.

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Publication Calendar


Volume 2, Number 2
Theme: 3D Virtual Worlds for Health and Healthcare
Guest Editors:
Susan Toth-Cohen, Thomas Jefferson University, USA
Simon Bignell, University of Derby, UK
Maged N. Kamel Boulos, University of Plymouth, UK
Deadline for Abstracts: 20 January 2009
To be Published: May 2009
Call For Papers


Volume 2, Number 3
Theme: Virtual Worlds: Technology, Economy, and Standards
Guest Editors:
Yesha Sivan, Metaverse Laboratories & Shenkar College, Israel
J.H.A. (Jean) Gelissen, Philips Research
Deadline for Abstracts: 20 March 2009
To be Published: September 2009
Call For Papers


Volume 2, Number 4
Theme: Virtual Economies, Virtual Goods and Service Delivery in Virtual Worlds
Guest Editors:
Mandy Salomon, Smart Services CRC, Australia
Serge Soudoplatoff, ESCP-EAP / Hetic, France
Deadline for Abstracts: 15 June 2009
To be Published: November 2009
Call For Papers


Volume 2, Number 5
Theme: The Metaverse Assembled
Guest Editors:
D. Linda Garcia, Georgetown University, USA
Hanan Gazit, MetaverSense Ltd and H.I.T-Holon Institute of Technology, Israel
Garrison LeMasters, Georgetown University, USA
Deadline for Abstracts: 30 March 2009
To be Published: December 2009/January 2010
Call For Papers


Volume 3, Number 1
Theme: Research Methods for Virtual Worlds
Guest Editors:
Elizabeth Dean, RTI, USA
Tracy Tuten, Longwood University, USA
Deadline for Abstracts: 15 September 2009
To be Published: February 2010
Call For Papers (Forthcoming)


Volume 3, Number 2
Theme: Government and Virtual Worlds
Guest Editors:
Paulette Robinson and Michael Piller
National Defense University, USA
Deadline for Abstracts: 20 November 2009
To be Published: May 2010
Call For Papers


Volume 3, Number 3
Theme: Virtual Worlds for Kids
Guest Editors:
Sun Sun Lim, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, USA
Deadline for Abstracts: 20 October 2009
To be Published: September 2010
Call For Papers


Sponsors:


Singapore Internet Research Centre

Texas Digital Libraries

Dept. of Radio, TV & Film - U. of Texas at Austin


Publisher:


Virtual Worlds Research Consortium

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Editor:

Jeremiah Spence, University of Texas at Austin

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On the Relationship between My Avatar and Myself

Paul R Messinger, Xin Ge, Eleni Stroulia, Kelly Lyons, Kristen Smirnov, Michael Bone

Abstract

What is the relationship between avatars and the people they represent in terms of appearance and behavior? In this paper, we hypothesize that people (balancing motives of self-verification and self-enhancement) customize the image of their avatars to bear similarity to their real selves, but with moderate enhancements. We also hypothesize that virtual-world behavior (due to deindividuation in computer-mediated communication environments) is less restrained by normal inhibitions than real-world behavior. Lastly, we hypothesize that people with more attractive avatars than their real selves will be somewhat more confident and extraverted in virtual worlds than they are in the real world.

We examine these issues using data collected from Second Life residents using an in-world intercept method that involved recruiting respondents’ avatars from a representative sample of locations. Our quantitative data indicate that, on average, people report making their avatars similar to themselves, but somewhat more attractive. And, compared to real-world behavior, respondents indicate that their virtual-world behavior is more outgoing and risk-taking and less thoughtful/more superficial. Finally, people with avatars more attractive than their real selves state that they are more outgoing, extraverted, risk-taking, and loud than their real selves (particularly if they reported being relatively low on these traits in the real world). Qualitative data from open-ended questions corroborate our hypotheses.

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