An ontology to represent energy-related occupant behavior in buildings. Part I: Introduction to the DNAs framework

被引:240
作者
Hong, Tianzhen [1 ]
D'Oca, Simona [1 ,2 ]
Turner, William J. N. [1 ,3 ]
Taylor-Lange, Sarah C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Politecn Torino, Dept Energy, TEBE Grp, Technol Energy Bldg Environm, Turin, Italy
[3] Univ Coll Dublin, Elect Res Ctr, Dublin 2, Ireland
基金
美国能源部;
关键词
Occupant behavior; Building energy; Ontology; Human-building-system interaction; Simulation; Modeling; WINDOW OPENING BEHAVIOR; THERMAL COMFORT; STOCHASTIC-MODEL; USER BEHAVIOR; PATTERN DETECTION; MANUAL CONTROL; LONG-TERM; SIMULATION; PERFORMANCE; SYSTEMS;
D O I
10.1016/j.buildenv.2015.02.019
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Reducing energy consumption in the buildings sector requires significant changes, but technology alone may fail to guarantee efficient energy performance. Human behavior plays a pivotal role in building design, operation, management and retrofit, and is a crucial positive factor for improving the indoor environment, while reducing energy use at low cost. Over the past 40 years, a substantial body of literature has explored the impacts of human behavior on building technologies and operation. Often, need-action-event cognitive theoretical frameworks were used to represent human-machine interactions. In Part I of this paper, a review of more than 130 published behavioral studies and frameworks was conducted. A large variety of data-driven behavioral models have been developed based on field monitoring of the human,building-system interaction. Studies have emerged scattered geographically around the world that lack in standardization and consistency, thus leading to difficulties when comparing one with another. To address this problem, an ontology to represent energy-related occupant behavior in buildings is presented. Accordingly, the technical DNAs framework is developed based on four key components: i) the Drivers of behavior, ii) the Needs of the occupants, iii) the Actions carried out by the occupants, and iv) the building systems acted upon by the occupants. This DNAs framework is envisioned to support the international research community to standardize a systematic representation of energy-related occupant behavior in buildings. Part II of this paper further develops the DNAs framework as an XML (eXtensible Markup Language) schema, obXML, for exchange of occupant information modeling and integration with building simulation tools. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:764 / 777
页数:14
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