Feedback on household electricity consumption: a tool for saving energy?. Fischer, C. Energy Efficiency, 1(1):79--104, February, 2008.
Feedback on household electricity consumption: a tool for saving energy? [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Improved feedback on electricity consumption may provide a tool for customers to better control their consumption and ultimately save energy. This paper asks which kind of feedback is most successful. For this purpose, a psychological model is presented that illustrates how and why feedback works. Relevant features of feedback are identified that may determine its effectiveness: frequency, duration, content, breakdown, medium and way of presentation, comparisons, and combination with other instruments. The paper continues with an analysis of international experience in order to find empirical evidence for which kinds of feedback work best. In spite of considerable data restraints and research gaps, there is some indication that the most successful feedback combines the following features: it is given frequently and over a long time, provides an appliance-specific breakdown, is presented in a clear and appealing way, and uses computerized and interactive tools.
@article{ fischer_feedback_2008,
  title = {Feedback on household electricity consumption: a tool for saving energy?},
  volume = {1},
  issn = {1570-646X, 1570-6478},
  shorttitle = {Feedback on household electricity consumption},
  url = {http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12053-008-9009-7},
  doi = {10.1007/s12053-008-9009-7},
  abstract = {Improved feedback on electricity consumption may provide a tool for customers to better control their consumption and ultimately save energy. This paper asks which kind of feedback is most successful. For this purpose, a psychological model is presented that illustrates how and why feedback works. Relevant features of feedback are identified that may determine its effectiveness: frequency, duration, content, breakdown, medium and way of presentation, comparisons, and combination with other instruments. The paper continues with an analysis of international experience in order to find empirical evidence for which kinds of feedback work best. In spite of considerable data restraints and research gaps, there is some indication that the most successful feedback combines the following features: it is given frequently and over a long time, provides an appliance-specific breakdown, is presented in a clear and appealing way, and uses computerized and interactive tools.},
  language = {en},
  number = {1},
  urldate = {2014-03-17TZ},
  journal = {Energy Efficiency},
  author = {Fischer, Corinna},
  month = {February},
  year = {2008},
  keywords = {Advanced metering, Consumers, Electricity bill, Electricity consumption, Energy Economics, Energy conservation, Environment, general, Environmental Economics, Feedback, Literature review, Renewable Energy Sources},
  pages = {79--104}
}

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