Malte Elson

Malte Elson

Junior Researcher

Biography

In 2011, Malte Elson received his German diploma in Psychology at the University of Cologne. In his diploma thesis he reviewed the literature on "Effects of Displayed Violence and Game Speed in First-Person Shooters on Physiological Arousal and Aggressive Behavior", and conducted an experiment on his own in which he employed modding of a digital game as a tool for experimental manipulation, as well as some alternative behavioral methods to measure arousal.

Since September 2011, Malte works at MICT as a junior researcher in the "3DTV 2.0" IBBT project, for which he conducts experimental research on user experience of digital games with 3D technology.

Projects

Here you'll find an overview of projects that Malte Elson is involved with:

Publications

List of publications for Malte Elson:

  • Elson, M. (2011). Seek and ye shall find: The unstandardized use of the CRTT to measure aggressive behavior. Paper presented at the 1st multi.player Conference, Hohenheim, Germany.
  • Elson, M. (2011). The Effects of Displayed Violence and Game Speed in First-Person Shooters on Physiological Arousal and Aggressive Behavior. Diploma thesis. University of Cologne.
  • Elson, M., Breuer, J., & Quandt, T. (2010). Too fast or too furious? The effects of displayed violence and game speed in first-person shooters on physiological arousal and aggressive behavior. Paper presented at the 4th Future and Reality of Gaming Conference (FROG), Vienna, Austria.

More publications on www.malte-elson.com