Review of methods to map people’s daily activity – application for smart homes
Review of methods to map people’s daily activity – application for smart homes
People’s daily activity in their home has widespread implications, including health and energy consumption, yet in most environmental studies people’s activity is only estimated by using screening or structured observation. This paper reviews the current protocols and standards, and then identifies a mixed-method approach to measure people’s activity levels in free-living environments. One of the key issues is to gather accurate measurements while using ‘discreet’ observatory methods to have minimum impact on their behaviour. With the recent emergence and advancement of more accurate and affordable sensing technologies, this problem might be overcome. Drawn from physiological research, heart-rate monitoring, accelerometry, and automated visual diary, were used in a field study, which monitored a small sample of UK households during the winter of 2012. Within a smart home, these methods could potentially be used to forecast energy demand for heating and to manage power distribution peaks.
978-3-642-36644-4
401-411
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Shipworth, D.
f0c2fd64-352f-48f3-b518-e240b4801f2e
January 2013
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Shipworth, D.
f0c2fd64-352f-48f3-b518-e240b4801f2e
Gauthier, S. and Shipworth, D.
(2013)
Review of methods to map people’s daily activity – application for smart homes.
Hakansson, A., Höjer, M., Howlett, R.J. and Jain, L.C.
(eds.)
In Sustainability in Energy and Buildings. Proceedings of the 4th International Conference in Sustainability in Energy and Buildings (SEB´12).
vol. 22,
Springer.
.
(doi:10.1007/978-3-642-36645-1_38).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
People’s daily activity in their home has widespread implications, including health and energy consumption, yet in most environmental studies people’s activity is only estimated by using screening or structured observation. This paper reviews the current protocols and standards, and then identifies a mixed-method approach to measure people’s activity levels in free-living environments. One of the key issues is to gather accurate measurements while using ‘discreet’ observatory methods to have minimum impact on their behaviour. With the recent emergence and advancement of more accurate and affordable sensing technologies, this problem might be overcome. Drawn from physiological research, heart-rate monitoring, accelerometry, and automated visual diary, were used in a field study, which monitored a small sample of UK households during the winter of 2012. Within a smart home, these methods could potentially be used to forecast energy demand for heating and to manage power distribution peaks.
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More information
Published date: January 2013
Venue - Dates:
4th International Conference in Sustainability in Energy and Buildings (SEB´12), Stockholm, Sweden, 2012-09-03 - 2012-09-05
Organisations:
Energy & Climate Change Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 378779
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378779
ISBN: 978-3-642-36644-4
ISSN: 2190-3018
PURE UUID: 714f53ca-a981-4daf-9a35-cdd31de546af
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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2015 16:23
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:52
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Contributors
Author:
D. Shipworth
Editor:
A. Hakansson
Editor:
M. Höjer
Editor:
R.J. Howlett
Editor:
L.C. Jain
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