LIST TIME! Below is a list of 50+ academics on Twitter who study or write about the overlap between video games and fields like psychology, communications, sociology, law, and more. The list was mostly generated by readers like you so. This is awesome, but it also means no guarantees about how much these people tweet, but I know that I found at least a few new sites and accounts to follow.
Thanks to everyone who contributed! If you have one to add, leave it in the comments.
- Alix, Florent: Game mechanics in interaction design and service design 
 Website | Twitter
- Aranzaes, Hugo: Video Game Psychology 
 Website | Twitter
- Bailenson, Jeremy: Virtual worlds, virtual reality 
 Website | Twitter
- Banks, Jamie: Virtual worlds, user-technology relationship 
 Website | Twitter
- Barr, Matthew: Video games & learning, research developer and games studies lecturer 
 Website | Twitter
- Bogost, Ian: Game designer 
 Website | Twitter
- Boudreau, Kelly: Avatar/player hybridity, player culture, social media games 
 Website | Twitter
- Bowman, Nick: Communications, interactive media 
 Website | Twitter
- Bushman, Brad: Violence in video games 
 Website | Twitter
- Cardona, Josué: Geek culture, health, counseling and eduction 
 Website | Twitter
- Cardona-Rivera, Rogelio: AI, cognitive psychology, narrative 
 Website | Twitter
- Chapman, Adam: Historical video games and the video game as a historical form.
 Website | Twitter
- Chen, Mark: Ethnography of games, Leet Noobs author 
 Website | Twitter
- Consalvo, Mia: Games studies, cheating 
 Website | Twitter
- Dickinson, Ted: Advertising in gaming 
 Twitter
- Dill-Shackleford, Karen: Media psychologist, Editor of the Oxford Handbook of Media Psychology 
 Twitter
- Eden, Allison: Media psychology and entertainment research 
 Twitter
- Ferguson, Christopher: Aggression, methods, meta analysis, children 
 Website | Twitter
- Fox, Jesse: Virtual environments (especially health, pro-environmental), avatars, agents, representations of sex, gender, and sexuality in games 
 Website | Twitter
- Fritsch, Melanie: Video Games music, virtual worlds research 
 Website | Twitter
- Good, Berni: Video Game Psychologist 
 Website | Twitter
- Griffiths, Mark: Gambling, video game addiction 
 Website | Twitter
- Heron, Michael: Accessibility and video games and text games 
 Website | Twitter
- Hilgard, Joseph : Preferences, addiction, violence, effects of game mechanics, statistics 
 Website | Twitter
- Huskey, Richard: Media Neuroscience, neural correlates of flow, evolutionary motivations for gameplay 
 Website | Twitter
- Ivory, James: Game content, game structure, game effects 
 Website | Twitter
- Jansz, Jeroen: Communications, media 
 Website | Twitter
- Jones, Sherry: Philosophy and rhetoric in games, games based learning 
 Website | Twitter
- Kowert, Rachel: Stereotypes of gamers, game involvement and social competence 
 Website | Twitter
- Kuniak, Steve: Geek/gamer culture 
 Website | Twitter
- Lastowka, Greg: Virtual World, intellectual property, and Internet law 
 Website | Twitter
- Lewis Evans, Ben: Human factors psychologist, gamer, researcher, teacher, presenter 
 Website | Twitter
- Lin, Jeffrey: Player behaviors in League of Legends 
 Twitter
- Madigan, Jamie: Psychology and video games 
 Website | Twitter
- McGonigal, Jane: Positive psychology, education, game design 
 Website | Twitter
- McReady, David: Writer, blogger, podcaster 
 Website | Twitter
- Media Neuroscience Lab: Narratives & morality, interactive narratives & violence, persuasion neuroscience 
 Website | Twitter
- Monu, Kafui: Research Associate, Use of games in business and organizations, gameful design, system analysis 
 Website | Twitter
- O’Connor, Patrick: Psychology, comics, and mental health 
 Website | Twitter
- Ortiz de Gortari, Angelica: Game transfer phenomenon 
 Website | Twitter
- Przybylski, Andrew: Motivation, psychology, games, Internet, self-regulation, psychosocial functioning 
 Website | Twitter
- Ralph, Paul: Design theory, gameful design, gamification 
 Website | Twitter
- Ross, Travis: Motivation, media design, cognitive psychology 
 Website | Twitter
- Schnell, Jessee: Game design 
 Website | Twitter
- Sicart, Miguel: Ethics in video games 
 Website | Twitter
- Spiel, Katharina: Accessibility and adaptiveness in video games and text games 
 Twitter
- Stigell, Louise: Video game psychology and gamification 
 Website | Twitter
- Sutherland, John: Editor in Chief of the Computer Games Journal 
 Website | Twitter
- Togelius, Julian: AI in games, procedural content generation, player modeling 
 Website | Twitter
- Video Game Research: research of all kinds related to video games 
 Website | Twitter
- Vorderer, Peter: Game enjoyment, interactivity, media 
 Website | Twitter
- Wearn, Nia: LudoLiteracy, teaching games design, adapting industry models & production methodologies to work in an educational setting 
 Website | Twitter
- Weststar, Johanna: Working conditions, quality of life, citizenship at work, sustainability 
 Website | Twitter
- White, Lauren: Cognitive psychology, learning in games, cognitive benefits from gaming Website | Twitter
- Yee, Nick: Virtual Worlds 
 Website | Twitter
- Yen Tang, Wai:  Blogger, grad student (communication & psychology) 
 Website | Twitter
- Young, Bryan-Mitchell: Ethnography of LAN parties, performances of gender and race 
 Website | Twitter
Again, if you know of someone who should be on this list but isn’t, leave a comment below.



Dear Jamie,
My name is Leonardo Marengo, I am a student of the BA in Psychology (National University of Córdoba, Argentina), and researcher at the Laboratory of Psychology (Faculty of Psychology, National University of Cordoba, Argentina). Also, I integrate the management team of Project Neumann – Neuro Games, a project that placed third (over 600 projects) in an internal competition of E3 2013, held in Los Angeles (California, USA). Furthermore, my research focuses on evaluating the use of cognitive training games for children, adolescents and adults. I would be on the list! I do not have Twitter, but a Facebook profile (https://www.facebook.com/lmarengo66), which regularly share press releases related to cognitive research in video games. Additionally, I share the website of Neuro Games: http://www.neuro-games.com/.
Best regards,
Leonardo Marengo
Leonardo,
Soy una alumna universitaria del nivel posgrado en los EEUU. En mi facultad, estamos trabajando con un profesor para disenar y distribuir juegos para entrenar analistas de inteligencia (hemos participado en un proyecto de IARPA que se llama SIRIUS). Trabajamos mucho con la psicologia cognitiva y lo que se llaman cognitive biases.
Yo vivia en Cordoba por muchos anos y me encantaria establecer un vinculo ahi con una facultad y los intereses academicos de mi facultad. Si te interesa una conversacion, mi mail es mriche22@lakers.mercyhurst.edu.
My name is David Mullich. I’ve been a game producer for over thirty years, teach game production at The Los Angeles Film School, and helped create the Boy Scout Game Design Merit Badge. I tweet daily on game design, gamification of the classroom, game-based learning, and game development for kids. My Twitter handle is @David_Mullich. Thank you.
My name is Jim Scullion. I teach Computer Games Development at the University of the West of Scotland/ My research interests are in virtual worlds and collaborative learning. Twitter @jimscullion
I’d add Jesper Juul @jesperjuul and Todd Harper @laevantine. Nice list! It’s a little overwhelming.
My name is Sebastian Standke. I’m from Germany and managed to publish some articles for Game Studies-anthologies, mostly with uncommon topics: connections between theatre and games, the embodyment of GLaDOS, the flow phenomenon at speedrunning sessions, … Actually I work on a calendar-project about digital games culture as well as on an anthology about atmosphere in games as a aesthetical strategy – together with the German media and culture scholar Christian Huberts. For that we still search for some game designers to answer us three questions about their work. You can find our Call for Interviews in English here: http://christianhuberts.blogspot.de/2013/05/betweenworlds-interviews.html
It’d be great if you could add us in your list:
Christian Huberts | Twitter: @ChristianHaH | Homepage: http://christianhuberts.blogspot.de/
Sebastian Standke | Twitter: @s_standke | (Kinda homepage: http://superlevel.de/author/sebastian/ )
Thank you!
Don’t forget Lennart Nacke (@acagamic), whose work was recently presented on the New Yorker website (http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/11/the-psychology-of-first-person-shooter-games.html). His research group’s website is: http://hcigames.businessandit.uoit.ca/
As for myself (@elisamekler), I’m a PhD student in psychology, tweeting often about motivation and games.
I’m currently in the last year of my Bsc Psychology. My final year project is focussed around Action Games on Aggression and Hostility.
I am hoping to take this research further to investigate effects of video games on a wide range of research areas using a number of different research methods.
Thank you for this invaluable list. Jamie, you’re just too damn useful to bloggers. Especially those of us who really care about empirical research.
I study games, literature, and interactive storytelling. @tbxsmason
And thank you so much for this valuable list!
Tina M Gonzales @tmgTeaching Will be creating gamification classes for adults.
Priscilla Haring @ThePrisca Focus on the psychology in gaming – effect research – evidence based – current PhD research “Gaming to cope” http://www.priscillaharing.info/?page_id=1281
I created a twitter list https://twitter.com/startmyquest/lists/video-game-academics-2 of all these from the original crowdsourced google doc. If you add yourself and anyone else you think should be on it. I’ll periodically keep the twitter list up-to-date too. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Am04dkUpi5bOdHFiWDU2MmNuTjFTRUowazNIY2FGX3c&usp=sharing#gid=0
Oh and thanks for creating the list in the first place Jamie. I certainly found some great links and people from it.
Pingback: TED talk- gaming makes you a superior human being. | FTVMS 212 & 328, 2014 - Videogames
Hi. Your site is awesome! I have a blog on using parser-based Interactive Fiction for foreign language learning: http://www.theswanstation.com. Twitter: @creedpatton. Cheers!
Hi, we’re a games development studio and research agency based in the UK. Have a look at our @dubit and @dubitgames accounts and you should find plenty there worth sharing. Be great if you could add our accounts too, our site is dubitlimited.com
Yvette Wohn, PhD (@arcticpenguin). I study social network games
Hello everyone, I’m Christopher Michael Yap, and I am currently a PhD candidate at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (http://www.naist.jp). My research focus is interactive narrative in digital games. These days I have been becoming particularly interested in the ideas surrounding emergent narrative in games.
Concurrently, I am also a narrative designer and producer at Plain Box Interactive (http://plain-box.com), a small indie game studio working out of Japan.
I am also fervently interested in advocacy for Game Studies. To that end, I have spoken at PAX East 2014 on a panel on Mythology in Games (http://youtu.be/WtjAzMj-bIg).
You can find me at @smart_bad
Sebastian Deterding – @dingtweets – Gamification, ethics, user experience
Lindsay Grace – @mindtoggle – Game design
Kathrin Gerling – @kathringerling – Human-computer Interaction
Bob De Schutter – @bobdeschutter – Games and ageing, game design, games and learning, motivation
Lennart Nacke – @acagamic – User experience, game design
Karolien Poels – @KPoels – Player experience, consumer psychology
Wijnand IJsselsteijn – @psych_tech – human-computer interaction, neuropsychology
Johannes Breuer – @matteagle09 – communication psychology
Malte Elson – @matoesermalte – mediapsychology, effects
Ashley Brown – @gamergrrl – game design, sexuality in rpgs
It should be Jesse Schell, not Jessee Schnell
Hi all, my name is James Butler (@Clock_punk on Twitter), a researcher in clinical gaming studies to promote environmental learning (The Lakescraft Project at Lancaster University, UK), research on cognitive mapping procedures, and a general interest in the design of digital worlds and player interaction – a rather mixed bag, but exteremely interconnected. Always enjoy chatting with fellow researchers in the field.