Background Effective training in traffic incident response is vital for urban law enforcement cadets, particularly for managing complex, high-pressure scenarios at busy intersections. Traditional instructional methods, including lectures, paper exercises, and drills, often fail to replicate the urgency, variability, and procedural complexity of real incidents. This gap may leave cadets underprepared for field deployment. Intervention The Dubai Police Academy utilizes a gamified simulation model developed by the Virtual Technology Center to train cadets in real-time decision-making, traffic management, and procedural compliance under the UAE traffic code. The simulation integrated serious gaming elements, branching narrative scenarios, and real-time performance feedback within a 3D virtual environment. The training was delivered across a 10-week semester, with cadets completing a series of structured simulation sessions embedded within the practical component of the Traffic Studies course. Methods A pilot feasibility study was conducted with 32 final year cadets. Trainees completed baseline, practice, and evaluation scenarios involving dynamic traffic accidents. Data were collected from performance logs, instructor observations, and pre- and post-training surveys. The simulation emphasized experiential learning in immersive, feedback-driven scenarios and deliberate practice, using real-time feedback and adaptive consequences. Results The cadets demonstrated statistically significant improvements in decision-making accuracy (+17.4%), procedural compliance (+28.9%), and documentation quality (+16.8%). The survey data indicated increased confidence and perceived realism. Training was rated as relevant, engaging, and suitable for integration into the regular curriculum. Conclusion This study illustrates the pedagogical and operational value of gamified simulations for police training. By embedding legal accuracy and realistic complexity into a structured feedback loop, the simulation effectively bridged the gap between theory and practice. The findings support the broader adoption of immersive training tools in public safety education and offer a replicable framework for law enforcement agencies worldwide.
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Ahmad Alsuwaidi
University of Nicosia
Ahmad Alsuwaidi
University of Nicosia
Nasser Alawlaqi
National Police Academy
Simulation & Gaming
University of Nicosia
Digital Science (United States)
Rochester Institute of Technology - Dubai
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Alsuwaidi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8962d6c1944d70ce07782 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/10468781261439724
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