Deviant and guilt-ridden: Computing within psychological limits

Authors

  • Bran Knowles
  • Elina Eriksson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v20i8.6127

Abstract

In this position paper we discuss a set of problems particular to computing within limits that draws on psychological and sociological barriers. The enormity of the predicaments we are facing, global climate change and resource scarcity, together with the social, cultural and national settings in which we are facing these predicaments, are seriously hampering our possibility to address them. We argue that without confronting the underlying psychology that perpetuates our current state of un-sustainability, there is little computing can hope to achieve. Furthermore, we also argue that these psychological limits to computing do not only concern the users of our systems, often portrayed as the people in need of behavioral change, but also ourselves, as researchers within computing. In this paper we start exploring what these psychological limits could be, what ideas computing for sustainability has tried but should now retire, and start discussing a way forward.

Author Biographies

Bran Knowles

research student at Lancaster University (U.K.)

Elina Eriksson

Researcher at Green Leap and CESC (Centre for Sustainable Communication), and a teacher in the Department of Media Technology and Interaction Design (MID) at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

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Published

2015-07-31

How to Cite

Knowles, B., & Eriksson, E. (2015). Deviant and guilt-ridden: Computing within psychological limits. First Monday, 20(8). https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v20i8.6127