ICT4S2018: Volume Information

ICT4S2018. 5th International Conference on Information and Communication Technology for Sustainability

26 articles409 pagesPublished: May 10, 2018

Papers

Sedef Akinli Kocak, Gülfem Isiklar Alptekin, Andriy Miranskyy, Ayse Bener and Enzo Cialini
1-19
Maryam Al Hinai and Ruzanna Chitchyan
20-36
Quazi Mishkatul Alam, Bejon Sarker, Biplob Biswas, Kazi Hasan Zubaer, Tarik Reza Toha, Novia Nurain and A. B. M. Alim Al Islam
37-48
Oliver Bates, Adrian Friday, Julian Allen, Fraser McLeod, Tom Cherrett, Sarah Wise, Maja Piecyk, Marzena Piotrowska, Tolga Bektas and Thuba Nguyen
49-67
Jan C. T. Bieser and Lorenz M. Hilty
68-81
Alice Frantz Schneider, Sepideh Matinfar, Eoin Martino Grua, Diego Casado-Mansilla and Lars Cordewener
82-99
Andreas Fritsch and Stefanie Betz
100-111
Björn Hedin, Victor Larsson and Henrik Artman
112-124
Ralph Hintemann and Simon Hinterholzer
125-136
Anna Kramers, Tina Ringenson, Liridona Sopjani and Peter Arnfalk
137-152
David Lautenschutz, Sergio España, Albert Hankel, Sietse Overbeek and Patricia Lago
153-167
Jens Malmodin, Pernilla Bergmark and Sepideh Matinfar
168-186
Jens Malmodin and Dag Lundén
187-208
Samuel Mann, Oliver Bates and Raymond Maher
209-226
Jeremy Millard, Marie Nicole Sorivelle, Orfeas Konstantinos Katsikis, Elisabeth Unterfrauner and Christian Voigt
227-242
Sofie Nyström, Cecilia Katzeff and Daniel Pargman
243-257
Christina Pakusch, Gunnar Stevens and Paul Bossauer
258-269
Maria Palacin-Silva and Jari Porras
270-288
Lucas Pereira, Rodolfo Gonçalves, Filipe Quintal and Nuno Nunes
289-300
Hanna Pihkola, Mikko Hongisto, Olli Apilo, Mika Lasanen and Saija Vatanen
301-315
Christian Remy, Oliver Bates, Vanessa Thomas and Matthew Broadbent
316-331
Jack Townsend
332-349
Guido van Capelleveen, Johanna Pohl, Andreas Fritsch and Daniel Schien
350-364
Roberto Verdecchia, René Aparicio Saez, Giuseppe Procaccianti and Patricia Lago
365-383
Kelly Widdicks, Tina Ringenson, Daniel Pargman, Vishnupriya Kuppusamy and Patricia Lago
384-397
Jorge Luis Zapico and Maja Söderberg
398-409

Keyphrases

AaaS, Abiotic depletion potential, Accessibility as a Service, air pollution, Ambient Information Display, autonomous driving, benchmark, car sharing, carbon footprint, case study2, circular economy2, citizen science, civic technology, Cleantech, Cleanweb, climate change, climate impact, code smells, comparative analysis, consumer behaviour, CSA, data center, data demand, data visualization, database, dataset, decision support2, design for Attachment, design mockups, digital access, Digitalization, Domestic energy, E&M sector2, Empirical Experiment, energy consumption2, energy efficiency3, Energy footprint, energy monitoring, environmental impact, Environmental Impact Assessment, Environmental Sustainability, equality requirements, equality templates, everyday life, farming, food, Footprint of Things, freight, GHG abatement potential, Good Practices, Grassroots movements facilitated by ICT, Green ICT, Green Metrics, Greenhouse gas emissions, GreenIT, Grocery stores, ICT4, ICT sector2, ICT sustainability, ICT4S3, Information and Communication Technology, Innovation Alliances, Internet of Things, kerb side optimisation, last mile logistics, LES model, Life Cycle Assessment3, life cycle inventory, limits, Logistics, MaaS, maker movement, Mann-Bates maturing scale, Material carbon footprint, Material ecosystem toxicity potential, Material footprint, Material human toxicity potential, Material resource depletion potential, Maturity, Maturity Model, Media sector2, mobile access networks, Mobility as a Service, network services, non-use, NoSQL, Optimization, parcel demand, parcel sector, participation, Persuasive services, policy makers, policymakers, qualitative content analysis, RDBMS, reduced Internet connectivity, refactoring, reflection2, renewable energy, Requirements Engineering, requirements pattern, research through design, resource efficiency, Road and Transport, Shared autonomous vehicles, sharing economy, slow values, Smart Cities, smart-green, social media, social sustainability, software feature interaction, Spreng's Triangle, stakeholder engagement, Stakeholders, Sustainability5, Sustainable community building via ICT, Sustainable Development Goals, Sustainable HCI, Sustainable ICT, Sustainable Interaction Design, sustainable mobility2, Technology Enhanced Learning, technology use, Traffic Engineering, Traffic Simulator, Transformation Mindset, transparency, travel mode choice, undesign, urban mobility, use case, waste management practices.