• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
virology blog

virology blog

About viruses and viral disease

This Week in Virology

TWiV #7 – Viruses in video games

7 November 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology episode #7 has been posted at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #7

In this episode, Dick, Vincent, and guest Aidan discuss how viral infections play prominent roles in notable video games such as World of Warcraft, Pandemic II, and Bioshock.

The popular online video game World of Warcraft recently became a model for the transmission of virus infections. In late 2005, a dungeon was added in which players could confront and kill a powerful creature called Hakkar. In his death throes Hakkar hits foes with “corrupted blood” that contains a virus and causes a fatal infection. The infection was only meant to affect those in the immediate vicinity of Hakkar’s corpse, but the virus spread as players and their virtual pets traveled to other cities in the game. Within hours after the software update that installed the new dungeon, an epidemic ensued as millions of characters became infected.

Although such games are meant only for entertainment, they do model disease spread in a realistic manner. For example, the spread of the virus depended on the ease of travel within the game, interspecies transmission by pets, and asymptomatic carriers. These aspects of the game world mirrored real-world epidemiology, except for how the disease was halted: the game developers removed Hakkar’s dungeon and rebooted their computers.

Epidemiologists are limited to observational and retrospective studies when studying human infectious diseases. Computer models of epidemics have been developed, but they lack the variability and unexpected outcomes found in real world epidemics. Massively multiplayer online role-playing games have large numbers of participants (10 million for World of Warcraft) and therefore are excellent pools for experimental study of infectious diseases. While enjoyment and entertainment are the central focus of such games, the players are serious and devoted, and their responses to situations of danger approximate real-world reactions. For example, during the “corrupted blood” epidemic, those players with healing ability were the first to attempt to help the infected players. This action likely affected the dynamics of the epidemic since infected players survived longer and were able to travel and spread the infection. Multiplayer video games provide an excellent opportunity to examine the consequences of human actions within a statistically significant and controlled computer simulation.

Filed Under: Information, This Week in Virology

Dengue in the news

5 November 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

There is an article on Dengue in the NY Times this week. It’s short on science, but brings home the impact of the disease (which is rare in the US and Europe) in developing countries. The article focuses on the disease in Bangkok, where the United States Army maintains its largest overseas research laboratory. The US Army is interested in this disease because it affects soldiers in tropical areas.

According to the article, two different groups are working on dengue virus vaccines in Bangkok: the US Army laboratory, and a second which is a joint effort by Sanofi-Aventis and a Thai University. There is no information at all in the article on these vaccines, save for the information that they might be available in 5-7 years.

We discussed Dengue on episode #3 of our podcast, “This Week in Virology”. You can listen to that episode here, or subscribe in iTunes.

Filed Under: Information, This Week in Virology Tagged With: viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV #6 – Latest virus outbreaks

29 October 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology episode #6 has been posted at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #6

In this episode, Vincent and Dick discuss recent outbreaks of poliomyelitis, west Nile and eastern equine encephalitis, Nipah virus, norovirus, and a case of lethal herpes simplex in an infant.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology

TWiV #4 – Rabies

18 October 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology episode #4 has been posted at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #4

In this episode, Vincent and Dick discuss rabies in humans and animals.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology

TWiV #2 – Polio is not dead

28 September 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology episode #2 has been posted at twiv.tv. In this episode Vincent and Dick discuss the current global state of polio.

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #2

TWiV has been accepted into the iTunes podcast directory. Click here to subscribe to TWiV in iTunes.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology

This Week in Virology – TWiV

24 September 2008 by Vincent Racaniello

The first episode of my new netcast, This Week in Virology – TWiV – has been posted. It’s at www.microbe.tv/twiv.

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #1

In this episode, Dick Despommier and I talk about West Nile Virus.

I hope to continue TWiV on a weekly basis. Next topic for 26 September: polio.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 118
  • Go to page 119
  • Go to page 120

Primary Sidebar

by Vincent Racaniello

Earth’s virology Professor
Questions? virology@virology.ws

With David Tuller and
Gertrud U. Rey

Follow

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram
Get updates by RSS or Email

Contents

Table of Contents
ME/CFS
Inside a BSL-4
The Wall of Polio
Microbe Art
Interviews With Virologists

Earth’s Virology Course

Virology Live
Columbia U
Virologia en Español
Virology 101
Influenza 101

Podcasts

This Week in Virology
This Week in Microbiology
This Week in Parasitism
This Week in Evolution
Immune
This Week in Neuroscience
All at MicrobeTV

Useful Resources

Lecturio Online Courses
HealthMap
Polio eradication
Promed-Mail
Small Things Considered
ViralZone
Virus Particle Explorer
The Living River
Parasites Without Borders

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.