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Purva Grover

Cleveland Clinic

ORCID: 0000-0001-5191-891X

Publishes on Energy and Environment Impacts, Digital Marketing and Social Media, Social Media and Politics. 84 papers and 3.2k citations.

84Publications
3.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Climate change and COP26: Are digital technologies and information management part of the problem or the solution? An editorial reflection and call to action
Yogesh K. Dwivedi, Laurie Hughes, Arpan Kumar Kar et al.|International Journal of Information Management|2021
Cited by 715Open Access

The UN COP26 2021 conference on climate change offers the chance for world leaders to take action and make urgent and meaningful commitments to reducing emissions and limit global temperatures to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels by 2050. Whilst the political aspects and subsequent ramifications of these fundamental and critical decisions cannot be underestimated, there exists a technical perspective where digital and IS technology has a role to play in the monitoring of potential solutions, but also an integral element of climate change solutions. We explore these aspects in this editorial article, offering a comprehensive opinion based insight to a multitude of diverse viewpoints that look at the many challenges through a technology lens. It is widely recognized that technology in all its forms, is an important and integral element of the solution, but industry and wider society also view technology as being part of the problem. Increasingly, researchers are referencing the importance of responsible digitalization to eliminate the significant levels of e-waste. The reality is that technology is an integral component of the global efforts to get to net zero, however, its adoption requires pragmatic tradeoffs as we transition from current behaviors to a more climate friendly society.

Perceived usefulness, ease of use and user acceptance of blockchain technology for digital transactions – insights from user-generated content on Twitter
Purva Grover, Arpan Kumar Kar, Marijn Janssen et al.|Enterprise Information Systems|2019
Cited by 247Open Access

Although blockchain has attracted a great deal of attention from academia and industry there is a lack of studies on acceptance drivers. This study explores blockchain acceptance by mining the collective intelligence of users on Twitter. It maps blockchain user acceptance drivers to technology acceptance constructs. The analysis shows that users are attracted by security, privacy, transparency, trust and traceability aspects provided by blockchain. On Twitter more discussions on blockchain benefits than on drawbacks. Initial coin offering (ICO) is extensively discussed. The study provides guidelines for managers and concludes by presenting the limitations of the study along with future research directions.