全部版块 我的主页
论坛 计量经济学与统计论坛 五区 计量经济学与统计软件 LATEX论坛
1698 0
2015-06-29
(This article was first published on Civil Statistician » R, and kindly contributed to R-bloggers)

A while back I recommended Nathan Uyttendaele’s beginner’s guide to speeding up R code.

I’ve just heard about Nathan’s computer game project, DotCity. It sounds like a statistician’s minimalist take on SimCity, with a special focus on demographic shifts in your population of dots (baby booms, aging, etc.). Furthermore, he’s planning to program the internals using R.

This is where scatterplot points go to live and play when they’re not on duty.


Consider backing the game on Kickstarter (through July 8th). I’m supporting it not just to play the game itself, but to see what Nathan learns from the development process. How do you even begin to write a game in R? Will gamers need to have R installed locally to play it, or will it be running online on something like an RStudio server?

Meanwhile, do you know of any other statistics-themed computer games?

  • I missed the boat on backing Timmy’s Journey, but happily it seems that development is going ahead.
  • SpaceChem is a puzzle game about factory line optimization (and not, actually, about chemistry). Perhaps someone can imagine how to take it a step further and gamifystatistical process control à la Shewhart and Deming.
  • It’s not exactly stats, but working with data in textfiles is an important related skill.The Command Line Murders is a detective noir game for teaching this skill to journalists.
  • The command line approach reminds me of Zork and other old text adventure / interactive fiction games. Perhaps, using a similar approach to the step-by-step interaction of swirl (“Learn R, in R”), someone could make an I.F. game about data analysis. Instead of OPEN DOOR, ASK TROLL ABOUT SWORD, TAKE AMULET, you would type commands like READ TABLE, ASK SCIENTIST ABOUT DATA DICTIONARY, PLOT RESIDUALS… all in the service of some broader story/puzzle context, not just an analysis by itself.
  • Kim Asendorf wrote a fictional “short story” told through a series of data visualizations. (See also FlowingData’s overview.) The same medium could be used for a puzzle/mystery/adventure game.







To leave a comment for the author, please follow the link and comment on his blog: Civil Statistician » R.
R-bloggers.com offers daily e-mail updates about R news and tutorials on topics such as: visualization (ggplot2, Boxplots, maps, animation), programming (RStudio, Sweave,LaTeX, SQL, Eclipse, git, hadoop, Web Scraping) statistics (regression, PCA, time series,trading) and more...


二维码

扫码加我 拉你入群

请注明:姓名-公司-职位

以便审核进群资格,未注明则拒绝

相关推荐
栏目导航
热门文章
推荐文章

说点什么

分享

扫码加好友,拉您进群
各岗位、行业、专业交流群