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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kate Raynes-Goldie is a Canadian-New Zealand[1] designer, writer, speaker, cultural anthropologist and certified Lego Serious Play facilitator[2] known for her work on play and games for human connection, creativity and innovation. She is a regular media commentator, appearing on MTV, NPR and in the Australian Financial Review and Elle. She has a monthly innovation column in the Business News, and is a regular contributor to Scitech's science and technology publication, Particle.[3] Raynes-Goldie was the first Director of Interactive Programs at FTI[4] and a past Senior Adjunct Research Fellow at Curtin University.[5]
Kate Raynes-Goldie | |
---|---|
Born | Toronto, Canada |
Nationality | Canadian & New Zealand |
Raynes-Goldie is also known for her early work on how people understand, use and connect with each other on social media,[6] in particular her ethnographic research on Facebook and privacy. She co-authored the first scholarly examination of friending on social networks.[7]
Her PhD thesis was titled Privacy in the Age of Facebook: Discourse, Architecture, Consequences.[8] The thesis was the 5th most downloaded thesis of all time from the Curtin University library repository as of July 2022.[9]
Raynes-Goldie spoke at SXSW in 2007[10] on a panel with danah boyd on young people’s use of social media, amidst the then ongoing moral panic around young people “over sharing” online.
Raynes-Goldie received funding from the MacArthur Foundation's Digital Media and Learning Initiative,[11] which resulted in her co-authored a chapter that examined young people's use of social media for activism and engagement in Civic Life Online, published by MIT press.[12]
Her games have been featured at international venues including Indiecade (San Francisco), Come Out and Play (New York), the National Theatre (London), Playpublik (Berlin), Fresh Air (Melbourne) and the TIFF Sprockets (Toronto).[citation needed][13]
She gave a talk on play and games as enablers of connection at TEDxPerth.[14]
Raynes-Goldie co-founded Atmosphere Industries, a game design studio[15][failed verification] and in 2007 co-created Ghost Town, an ARG aimed at exploring Perth.[16]
She has a BA(hons.) in Philosophy and Semiotics from the University of Toronto[citation needed] and holds a PhD in internet studies from Curtin University.
In 2016, she was awarded the Australian Computer Society's Digital Disruptors Awards' "ICT Professional of the Year",[17] and also won WAITTA Incite's Achiever of the Year.[18] In 2015 and 2016, she was named one of the 75 most influential women in the games industry in Australia and New Zealand by MCV[13] and a finalist for Curtin University's Alumni Professional Achievement Award in Humanities.[19]
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