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David Roedl

Researcher at Indiana University

Publications -  12
Citations -  441

David Roedl is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interaction design & Design education. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 12 publications receiving 396 citations.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Sustainable millennials: attitudes towards sustainability and the material effects of interactive technologies

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable Making? Balancing Optimism and Criticism in HCI Discourse

TL;DR: It is shown how the framing of the maker, as an empowered subject, presents certain opportunities and limitations for this research discourse, and offers alternative framings of empowerment that can expand maker discourse and its use in contemporary research problems such as SID.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design research at CHI and its applicability to design practice

TL;DR: This note describes the analysis of 35 papers from CHI 2011 that aim to improve or support interaction design practice, and describes how these CHI authors conceptualize design practice and the types of contributions they propose.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Luxury & new luxury, quality & equality

TL;DR: An informal design critical framework that embeds interaction design in terms of luxury and sustainability is proposed, and several examples of products and services are analyzed according to three themes: communications, computer software, and music.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Re-conceptualizing fashion in sustainable HCI

TL;DR: This paper considers a compelling idea concerning fashion and sustainable HCI and describes some related literature and thoughts about methods, reports on a collection of interviews and emergent insights, and several general design implications which link fashion positively to sustainable practices and futures.