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Understanding occupants’ behaviour, engagement, emotion, and comfort indoors with heterogeneous sensors and wearables

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 21:32 authored by Nan Gao, Max Marschall, Jane Burry, Simon WatkinsSimon Watkins, Flora SalimFlora Salim
We conducted a field study at a K-12 private school in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia. The data capture contained two elements: First, a 5-month longitudinal field study In-Gauge using two outdoor weather stations, as well as indoor weather stations in 17 classrooms and temperature sensors on the vents of occupant-controlled room air-conditioners; these were collated into individual datasets for each classroom at a 5-minute logging frequency, including additional data on occupant presence. The dataset was used to derive predictive models of how occupants operate room air-conditioning units. Second, we tracked 23 students and 6 teachers in a 4-week cross-sectional study En-Gage, using wearable sensors to log physiological data, as well as daily surveys to query the occupants’ thermal comfort, learning engagement, emotions and seating behaviours. Overall, the combined dataset could be used to analyse the relationships between indoor/outdoor climates and students’ behaviours/mental states on campus, which provide opportunities for the future design of intelligent feedback systems to benefit both students and staff.

History

Journal

Scientific Data

Volume

9

Number

261

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

16

Total pages

16

Publisher

Springer

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006117832

Esploro creation date

2022-10-15

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