Eli Blevis
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
122 Papers
473 Citations
Eli Blevis is an academic researcher from Hong Kong Polytechnic University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sustainability & Interaction design. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 117 publications. Previous affiliations of Eli Blevis include Indiana University & Northwestern University.
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Papers
Sustainable interaction design: invention & disposal, renewal & reuse
Eli Blevis
- 29 Apr 2007
TL;DR: A rubric for understanding the material effects of particular interaction design cases in terms of forms of use, reuse, and disposal, and several principles to guide Sustainable Interaction Design (SID) are proposed.
Sustainable millennials: attitudes towards sustainability and the material effects of interactive technologies
Kristin Hanks,William Odom,David Roedl,Eli Blevis +3 more
- 06 Apr 2008
TL;DR: The design and interprets the results of a survey of 435 undergraduate students concerning the attitudes of this mainly millennial population towards sustainability apropos of the material effects of information technologies yield key insights about understanding different notions of what it means to be successful in a material sense to this population.
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What instills trust? a qualitative study of phishing
Markus Jakobsson,Alex Tsow,Ankur Shah,Eli Blevis,Youn-kyung Lim +4 more
- 12 Feb 2007
TL;DR: A user study gauges reactions to a variety of common "trust indicators" - such as logos, third party endorsements, and padlock icons - over a selection of authentic and phishing stimuli to analysis of what makes phishing emails and web pages appear authentic.
Understanding and Mitigating the Effects of Device and Cloud Service Design Decisions on the Environmental Footprint of Digital Infrastructure
Chris Preist,Daniel Schien,Eli Blevis +2 more
- 07 May 2016
TL;DR: This paper performs a critical analysis of current design practice with regard to interactive services, and shows how user-centered design principles induce environmental impacts in different ways, and combine with technical and business drivers to drive growth of the infrastructure through a reinforcing feedback cycle.
Collapse informatics and practice: Theory, method, and design
TL;DR: This work introduces the notion of collapse informatics—the study, design, and development of sociotechnical systems in the abundant present for use in a future of scarcity and asks how notions of practice—theorized as collective activity in the “here and now”—can shift to the future since collapse has yet to occur.
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