Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste

The study of individual awareness of E-waste management practice plays an important role in the process of determining whether the individual understands and knows about E-waste management. Awareness is defined as the understanding of other activities in the context of own self activities (Dourish &...

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Published in:AIP Conference Proceedings
Main Author: Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: American Institute of Physics 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85192008212&doi=10.1063%2f5.0185169&partnerID=40&md5=8c832464f0ff8844e8523e1c8f64533b
id 2-s2.0-85192008212
spelling 2-s2.0-85192008212
Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
2024
AIP Conference Proceedings
2799
1
10.1063/5.0185169
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85192008212&doi=10.1063%2f5.0185169&partnerID=40&md5=8c832464f0ff8844e8523e1c8f64533b
The study of individual awareness of E-waste management practice plays an important role in the process of determining whether the individual understands and knows about E-waste management. Awareness is defined as the understanding of other activities in the context of own self activities (Dourish & Bellotti, 1992). Merikle (1984) define awareness into two different contrasted. One definition, used in recent masked-prime studies, is objective and equates awareness with the ability to make forced-choice decisions above a chance level of performance. While, the second definition, that was proposed by Henley (1984), is subjective and simply equates awareness with self-reports indicating that an observer "consciously sees" a stimulus. It is concluded that a better objective measure of awareness is needed to distinguish the subjective states of "seeing" and "not seeing" a stimulus. In term of environment awareness, according to Starke (1990), many have failed to translate awareness into commitment and although many individuals have knowledge of the environment, but they still have an irresponsible attitude towards it. In the context of this study, E-waste management awareness in the community was defined into three main elements: knowledge, attitudes and practices. © 2024 American Institute of Physics Inc.. All rights reserved.
American Institute of Physics
0094243X
English
Conference paper

author Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
spellingShingle Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
author_facet Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
author_sort Mohideen R.S.; Siwantini; Ridzuan A.R.; Ilyas I.Y.; Bakar M.H.; Nathania L.
title Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
title_short Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
title_full Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
title_fullStr Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
title_full_unstemmed Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
title_sort Level of Awareness Towards E-Waste
publishDate 2024
container_title AIP Conference Proceedings
container_volume 2799
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1063/5.0185169
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85192008212&doi=10.1063%2f5.0185169&partnerID=40&md5=8c832464f0ff8844e8523e1c8f64533b
description The study of individual awareness of E-waste management practice plays an important role in the process of determining whether the individual understands and knows about E-waste management. Awareness is defined as the understanding of other activities in the context of own self activities (Dourish & Bellotti, 1992). Merikle (1984) define awareness into two different contrasted. One definition, used in recent masked-prime studies, is objective and equates awareness with the ability to make forced-choice decisions above a chance level of performance. While, the second definition, that was proposed by Henley (1984), is subjective and simply equates awareness with self-reports indicating that an observer "consciously sees" a stimulus. It is concluded that a better objective measure of awareness is needed to distinguish the subjective states of "seeing" and "not seeing" a stimulus. In term of environment awareness, according to Starke (1990), many have failed to translate awareness into commitment and although many individuals have knowledge of the environment, but they still have an irresponsible attitude towards it. In the context of this study, E-waste management awareness in the community was defined into three main elements: knowledge, attitudes and practices. © 2024 American Institute of Physics Inc.. All rights reserved.
publisher American Institute of Physics
issn 0094243X
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype
record_format scopus
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