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Effects of self‐monitoring and feedback on residential electricity consumption

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TLDR
Reductions in electricity use were reported by households to be largely attributable to lowering of the heat thermostat, and large monetary and KWH savings were found.
Abstract
Prior research has indicated that frequent feedback could reduce residential electricity consumption by 10% to 15%. However, because feedback was primarily given in written form, this procedure might not be practical. The present study evaluated a potentially more practical feedback procedure during peak-use periods with high electricity consuming households. The study was conducted during the winter in an upper-middle class neighborhood of almost identical, all-electric townhouses (N = 71) that averaged about 170 KWH per day per household for a monthly bill of over $200. Twelve households received daily written feedback. Sixteen households (self-monitoring) were taught to read their outdoor electricity meter and to record KWH used every day. A comparison group was composed of 14 households that had volunteered to participate and 29 others that had only given permission to have their meters read. During a 1-month period that the procedures were in effect, the feedback group reduced consumption by 13% and the self-monitoring group by about 7%. These reductions, relative to the comparison group, were maintained during an early spring 1-month follow-up period and, to a lesser extent, during a 6-week warm spring period. Self-monitoring participants were highly reliable and persistent meter readers. Reductions in electricity use were reported by households to be largely attributable to lowering of the heat thermostat, and large monetary and KWH savings were found. Techniques to make self-monitoring cost-effective important components of the self-monitoring procedure, methods to apply self-monitoring more broadly, and plans to combine behavioral procedures with physical technology are discussed.

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The Effect of Goal-Setting and Daily Electronic Feedback on In-Home Energy Use

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Disaggregated End-Use Energy Sensing for the Smart Grid

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Joint effect of feedback and goal setting on performance: a field study of residential energy conservation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of both a difficult goal and feedback about performance in relation to that goal on residential electricity consumption and concluded that improved performance was a result of the joint effect of feedback and goal setting.
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Reducing residential electrical energy use: payments, information, and feedback.

TL;DR: Payments, energy information, and daily feedback on consumption were employed to reduce electricity use in four units of a university student housing complex, and it was found that payments combined with either information or feedback produced no greater effect than payments alone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reduction of residential consumption of electricity through simple monthly feedback.

TL;DR: The effects of a feasible program of monthly feedback showed a clear decrease in electricity consumption for the feedback group during the feedback phase, and the effect was maintained during a 4-mo intervention period.
Journal ArticleDOI

A behavioral analysis of peaking in residential electrical-energy consumers.

TL;DR: Information, feedback, and incentives were evaluated for their effects on peak energy consumption and a combination of feedback plus incentives was most effective and reduced peaking about 50%.
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