U.S. military to test games for training

Published: Feb. 4, 2008 at 7:37 PM

WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (UPI) -- The U.S. military will begin testing an immersive interactive game as a training tool, simulating the long-term evolving environment of a relief mission.

The so-called alternative reality game is being evaluated by the U.S. Joint Forces Command and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in a monthlong project run by Cambridge, Mass.-based contractor BBN Technologies.

In a statement, the company said a group of 124 active duty military, reservists, government staffers and university students was playing the scenario, set on a small tsunami-devastated island off the southern coast of the United States.

An unexplained illness is spreading among survivors of the storm, and the U.S. military task force formed to support the relief effort must now contend with the epidemic.

"This is the kind of situation that is most difficult to train for," said the company statement.

The games "offer the benefit of allowing trainees to practice the skills needed for such exceptional situations while they continue to do their regular jobs and to develop real relationships in a virtual scenario that will help them respond effectively when they are required to cope with" comparable situations in real life.

Because such games are "inherently distributed and built on complex, engaging scenarios, they are an effective and cost efficient way to train for long duration, large-scale problems that require individuals to respond both collectively and individually," Bill Ferguson of BBN Technologies said in the statement.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints


Additional News Stories
Watercooler Stories
Jockstrip: The world as we know it.
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
Holidays make alcohol available to teens
COL BKB: California 79, Jacksonville 47
Alzheimer's need not end driving
fark
You know that guy who spent 23 years in a coma but aware of everything going on? Even money says...
Police searching for the grinch or grinches who crushed a gingerbread town containing 650 gingerbread...
Lovers reportedly have sex in clock tower in broad daylight - of course that's only second hand
Irish turn their annual Christmas lighting ceremony into a drunken riot. Once again
Musician appeals for return of stolen tiki. The curse never ends, Greg
Ten tips to ease the hassles of holiday flying. 'Staying home' conspicuously absent