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Understanding the dynamics of residential energy consumption in the UK: mapping occupants thermal discomfort responses

Understanding the dynamics of residential energy consumption in the UK: mapping occupants thermal discomfort responses
Understanding the dynamics of residential energy consumption in the UK: mapping occupants thermal discomfort responses
Attempts to reduce the energy consumed in UK homes have had limited success. One reason for this has been identified as the ‘rebound effect’, where the occupants’ responses to their thermal environment change in unexpected ways after interventions. Although much of the research on heating patterns in dwellings has focused on achieving thermal comfort, less is understood about the way occupants form their responses. Using empirical methods drawn from social and cognitive sciences, this paper proposes a set of tools, implemented in a pilot study, carried out on a small sample of UK households during winter of 2010. One of the tools used, the SenseCam facilitates an electronic diary collection by logging occupants’ responses in a systematic approach. Preliminary monitoring works show that different householders are interacting with their home thermal comfort systems in very different ways, and that their responses diverge from the current predictive models. These results suggest that future samples may be examined to gain further insights about the development of ideas in this field.
behaviour, housing energy consumption, mental model, thermal comfort
978-91-633-4455-8
2103-2108
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed

Gauthier, S. (2011) Understanding the dynamics of residential energy consumption in the UK: mapping occupants thermal discomfort responses. ECEEE 2011 Summer Study. Energy Efficiency First: The foundation of a Low-Carbon Society, Toulon, France. 05 - 10 Jun 2011. pp. 2103-2108 .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Attempts to reduce the energy consumed in UK homes have had limited success. One reason for this has been identified as the ‘rebound effect’, where the occupants’ responses to their thermal environment change in unexpected ways after interventions. Although much of the research on heating patterns in dwellings has focused on achieving thermal comfort, less is understood about the way occupants form their responses. Using empirical methods drawn from social and cognitive sciences, this paper proposes a set of tools, implemented in a pilot study, carried out on a small sample of UK households during winter of 2010. One of the tools used, the SenseCam facilitates an electronic diary collection by logging occupants’ responses in a systematic approach. Preliminary monitoring works show that different householders are interacting with their home thermal comfort systems in very different ways, and that their responses diverge from the current predictive models. These results suggest that future samples may be examined to gain further insights about the development of ideas in this field.

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More information

Published date: June 2011
Venue - Dates: ECEEE 2011 Summer Study. Energy Efficiency First: The foundation of a Low-Carbon Society, Toulon, France, 2011-06-05 - 2011-06-10
Keywords: behaviour, housing energy consumption, mental model, thermal comfort
Organisations: Energy & Climate Change Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378755
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378755
ISBN: 978-91-633-4455-8
PURE UUID: fae7c81c-ab5f-42f1-ad45-061dd0a2abbc
ORCID for S. Gauthier: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1720-1736

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2015 10:56
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:52

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