猫咪社区APP

Heads Down, New Communities Build Up


Posted on July 29, 2016
Alice Jackson


Dr. Stephanie Jett, left, visiting assistant professor of psychology, shares Pok茅mon Go tips with Susan and Chandler Grimsley at Moulton Tower, where students and others flock to hunt for Pok茅mon. Susan Grimsley is a 2012 graduate of South with a master's degree in accounting. data-lightbox='featured'
Dr. Stephanie Jett, left, visiting assistant professor of psychology, shares Pok茅mon Go tips with Susan and Chandler Grimsley at Moulton Tower, where students and others flock to hunt for Pok茅mon. Susan Grimsley is a 2012 graduate of South with a master's degree in accounting.

The Pok茅mon Go craze will likely spur academic studies for a variety of reasons, according to a 猫咪社区APP psychologist who is also an avid player.

As more and more people around the world are downloading and playing the game, Dr. Stephanie Jett, a visiting assistant professor, said the potential for studying the phenomenon is increasing.

鈥淥bviously, people are building social communities that never would have come together if not for Pok茅mon Go,鈥 Jett said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e also hearing about people with social anxieties or other disorders getting up and moving outside the house for the first time in a long time to Pok茅 hunt, and that鈥檚 very interesting.鈥

The free smartphone app uses technology inside the phones to create an augmented reality for players to hunt and capture exotic characters from Pok茅mon, the popular Japanese cartoon franchise that became popular in the 1990s.

On South鈥檚 campus, students and area residents hunt for the creatures, especially in the evenings, and some pursue them into the wee hours of the morning. Players usually congregate in and around Moulton Tower, the Humanities Building and the Chemistry Building, claiming most Pok茅mon are there.

Jett said she began playing Pok茅mon Go with her 7-year-old nephew.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of taken over his little life right now, and both my sister and I are enjoying it with him. Also, I鈥檒l admit I play some on my own, and I鈥檝e gone down some streets in my new neighborhood I may never have visited otherwise,鈥 she said.

Jett said one interesting thing is how players are thinking about ways to reach out to people unable to play easily.

鈥淚 have a friend talking about forming a group to help disabled people get out and play Pok茅mon,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter about race, creed or religion, it seems. The game is breaking down barriers, bringing people together and also helping them to think about doing things together in ways they likely wouldn鈥檛 have ever done.鈥

Jett added it鈥檚 likely there鈥檚 also going to be downsides to Pok茅mon Go.

鈥淥ther than the safety aspect, you could get too involved with it. For students, it鈥檚 probably way more fun than studying, but all players need to be respectful where they play it, and they need to be aware it鈥檚 bad if the game leads them to shirk their adult responsibilities,鈥 she said.


Share on Social Media

Archive Search

Latest University News