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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Home energy monitors : Impact over the medium-term

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present the results of a 15-month pilot with a domestic energy monitor in the Netherlands and explore the extent to which participants manage to sustain their initial electricity savings over time, with a special focus on the development of habitual energy-saving behavior.
Abstract
Home Energy Management Systems (HEMS), e.g. energy monitors, are intermediary products that can visualize, manage, and/or monitor the energy use of other products or whole households. HEMS increasingly receive attention for their role in energy conservation in households. A literature review and a case study examine the mid-term effectiveness (more than 4 months) of HEMS. The case study presents the results of a 15-month pilot with a domestic energy monitor in the Netherlands. It explores the extent to which participants manage to sustain their initial electricity savings over time, with a special focus on the development of habitual energy-saving behaviour. The results show that the initial savings in electricity consumption of 7.8% after 4 months could not be sustained in the medium- to long-term. A second finding is that certain groups of people seem more receptive to energy-saving interventions than others. These participants quickly develop new habits and exhibit larger savings than other participants. Obviously, a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach for home energy monitors cannot be justified. For HEMS to be effective, a deeper understanding is needed that embraces social science, contextual factors, usability, and interaction design research.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Information strategies and energy conservation behavior: A meta-analysis of experimental studies from 1975 to 2012

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a meta-analysis of information-based energy conservation experiments conducted to date, and find that pecuniary feedback and incentives lead to a relative increase in energy usage rather than induce conservation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Keeping energy visible? Exploring how householders interact with feedback from smart energy monitors in the longer term

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report on how, over a 12-month period, UK householders interacted with feedback on their domestic electricity consumption in a field trial of real-time displays or smart energy monitors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart homes and their users: a systematic analysis and key challenges

TL;DR: A systematic analysis of peer-reviewed literature on smart homes and their users takes stock of the dominant research themes and the linkages and disconnects between them, resulting in an organising framework for future research that identifies the presence or absence of cross-cutting relationships between different understandings of smart home users.
Book ChapterDOI

Do Persuasive Technologies Persuade? - A Review of Empirical Studies

TL;DR: This review examines the results, methods, measured behavioral and psychological outcomes, affordances in implemented persuasive systems, and domains of the studies in the current body of research on persuasive technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart Homes as a Means to Sustainable Energy Consumption: A Study of Consumer Perceptions

TL;DR: In this article, consumer reactions to a fully furnished and equipped smart home are analyzed using focus groups (four groups with a total of 29 participants) and the analysis looks at consumer perceptions of and reactions to an energy management system which optimizes electricity consumption based on different ICT solutions.
References
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Book

Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do

B. J. Fogg
TL;DR: Mother Nature knows best--How engineered organizations of the future will resemble natural-born systems.
Book

Influence : science and practice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the principle of social proof in the context of Jujitsu and discuss the power of authority pressure and the dangers of blind obedience in the realm of influence.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Room with a Viewpoint: Using Social Norms to Motivate Environmental Conservation in Hotels

TL;DR: This paper examined the effectiveness of signs requesting hotel guests' participation in an environmental conservation program and found that normative appeals were more effective when describing group behavior that occurred in the setting that most closely matched individuals' immediate situational circumstances, referred to as provincial norms.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of intervention studies aimed at household energy conservation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed and evaluated the effectiveness of interventions aiming to encourage households to reduce energy consumption by changing individual knowledge and perceptions rather than changing contextual factors (i.e., pay-off structure) which may determine households' behavioral decisions.
Book

Persuasive technology : using computers to change what we think and do

B. J. Fogg
TL;DR: Fogg has coined the phrase Captology (an acronym for computers as persuasive technologies) to capture the domain of research, design, and applications of persuasive computers as mentioned in this paper, and has revealed how Web sites, software applications, and mobile devices can be used to change people's attitudes and behavior.
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