posted on 2024-10-31, 10:33authored byYolande Strengers
Eco-feedback systems currently frame householders as micro-resource managers, who weigh up the costs and benefits of their consumption, and make autonomous, rational and efficient decisions. Reporting on findings from a qualitative study of three Australian energy and water eco-feedback programs utilising an in-home display (IHD) system, this paper challenges this view. The research finds that householders consume energy and water to carry out everyday practices, such as showering, laundering and cooling, which are mediated by social, cultural, technical and institutional dynamics. The paper proposes an alternative design paradigm for eco-feedback systems premised on the realities of everyday life and identifies several design directions that emerge from this new starting point.
History
Related Materials
1.
ISBN - Is published in 9781450302289 (urn:isbn:9781450302289)
Start page
2135
End page
2144
Total pages
10
Outlet
Proceedings of the 2011 annual conference on Human factors in computing systems
Name of conference
ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems