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Journal ArticleDOI

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

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TLDR
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.
Abstract
Published research on smart homes and their users is growing exponentially, yet a clear understanding of who these users are and how they might use smart home technologies is missing from a field being overwhelmingly pushed by technology developers. Through a systematic analysis of peer-reviewed literature on smart homes and their users, this paper takes stock of the dominant research themes and the linkages and disconnects between them. Key findings within each of nine themes are analysed, grouped into three: (1) views of the smart home--functional, instrumental, socio-technical; (2) users and the use of the smart home--prospective users, interactions and decisions, using technologies in the home; and (3) challenges for realising the smart home--hardware and software, design, domestication. These themes are integrated into an organising framework for future research that identifies the presence or absence of cross-cutting relationships between different understandings of smart homes and their users. The usefulness of the organising framework is illustrated in relation to two major concerns--privacy and control--that have been narrowly interpreted to date, precluding deeper insights and potential solutions. Future research on smart homes and their users can benefit by exploring and developing cross-cutting relationships between the research themes identified.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Benefits and risks of smart home technologies

TL;DR: In this article, a representative national survey of UK homeowners (n=1025) finds prospective users have positive perceptions of the multiple functionality of smart home technologies including energy management, and an additional survey of actual smart home users participating in a smart home field trial identifies the key role of early adopters in lowering perceived smart home risks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning to live in a smart home

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a smart home architecture that can significantly enhance domestic comfort, convenience, security and leisure whilst simultaneously reducing energy use through optimized home energy management through smart homes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart home technologies in Europe: a critical review of concepts, benefits, risks and policies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the promise and peril of smart home technologies and suggest three areas of future research on the demographics and behavior of actual smart home adopters, rethinking the duality of "control,” and looking beyond "homes" towards socio-technical systems, practices, and justice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tendencies of Technologies and Platforms in Smart Cities: A State-of-the-Art Review

TL;DR: A comprehensive analysis of the concept and existing platforms of Smart Cities is performed and a clear understanding of the services that a Smart City must provide, the technology it should employ for the development of these services, and the scope that this concept covers is gained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart homes and the control of indoor air quality

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes current findings on the effect of measured environmental parameters on indoor air quality, individual thermal comfort and living behavior in smart homes with focus on central Europe.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brief paper: Ironies of automation

TL;DR: The ways in which automation of industrial processes may expand rather than eliminate problems with the human operator are discussed.
BookDOI

Consuming technologies : media and information in domestic spaces

TL;DR: Ang, Colin Campbell, Cynthia Cockburn, Jonathan Gershuny, Sonia Livingstone, Ian Miles, Daniel Miller, David Morley, Grahame Murdock, Tim Putnam, Marilyn Strathern, Diane Zimmerman Umble, Jane Wheelock as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of smart homes-Present state and future challenges

TL;DR: This article presents an international selection of leading smart home projects, as well as the associated technologies of wearable/implantable monitoring systems and assistive robotics, often designed as components of the larger smart home environment.
Book

More Work For Mother: The Ironies Of Household Technology From The Open Hearth To The Microwave

TL;DR: In the early stages of industrialization, household work and its tools were pre-industrialized under pre-Industrial conditions as discussed by the authors, and household technology and household work between 1900 and 1940.
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