Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 32, October 2017
Introduction to the Special Issue
1.) Seven questions around interdisciplinarity in energy research. --Margot Pellegrino, Marjorie Musy.
User Perceptions of Comfort, Convenience, Willingness
2.) Investigating willingness to save energy and communication about energy use in the American workplace with the attitude-behavior-context model. --Xiaojing Xu, Alexander Maki, Chien-fei Chen, Bing Dong, Julia K. Day.
3.) An integrated approach on energy consumption and indoor environmental quality performance in six Portuguese secondary schools. --Luísa Dias Pereira, Luis Neto, Hermano Bernardo, Manuel Gameiro da Silva.
4.) Upscaling participatory thermal sensing: Lessons from an interdisciplinary case study at University of California for improving campus efficiency and comfort. --Angela Sanguinetti, Marco Pritoni, Kiernan Salmon, Alan Meier, Joshua Morejohn.
5.) Green lift: Exploring the demand response potential of elevators in Danish buildings. --Sergi Rotger-Griful, Rune Hylsberg Jacobsen, Robert S. Brewer, Mia Kruse Rasmussen.
6.) Tackling the interplay of occupants’ heating practices and building physics: Insights from a German mixed methods study. --Anna Wolff, Ines Weber, Bernhard Gill, Johannes Schubert, Michael Schneider.
Barriers and Appropriation of Innovation for Energy Efficiency Technologies
7.) A systematic review of strategies for overcoming the barriers to energy-efficient technologies in buildings. --Dale E. Yeatts, Dana Auden, Christy Cooksey, Chien-Fei Chen.
8.) Convenience and energy consumption in the smart home of the future: Industry visions from Australia and beyond. --Yolande Strengers, Larissa Nicholls.
9.) Of comfort and cost: Examining indoor comfort conditions and guests’ valuations in Italian hotel rooms. --Tiziana Buso, Federico Dell’Anna, Cristina Becchio, Marta C. Bottero, Stefano P. Corgnati.
Stakeholder Perceptions of Design, Construction, and Refurbishment
10.) Ambitions at work: Professional practices and the energy performance of non-residential buildings in Norway. --Ida Nilstad Pettersen, Elli Verhulst, Roberto Valle Kinloch, Antje Junghans, Thomas Berker.
11.) The Living Lab methodology for complex environments: Insights from the thermal refurbishment of a historical district in the city of Cahors, France. --Sophie Claude, Stéphane Ginestet, Marion Bonhomme, Nicolas Moulène, Gilles Escadeillas.
12.) Evaluating the complex governance arrangements surrounding energy retrofitting programs: The case of collective ownership buildings in France. --Sophie Buessler, Dominique Badariotti, Christiane Weber.
13.) Putting the green into corrections: Improving energy conservation, building function, safety and occupant well-being in an American correctional facility. --Jennifer Eileen Cross, Tara O’Conner Shelley, Adam P. Mayer.
Multi-scale and Multi-method Approaches
14.) Designing for residents: Building monitoring and co-creation in social housing renovation in the Netherlands. --O. Guerra-Santin, S. Boess, T. Konstantinou, N. Romero Herrera, S. Silvester.
15.) Modeling and mapping domestic energy behavior: Insights from a consumer survey in France. --Alexis Bourgeois, Margot Pellegrino, Jean-Pierre Lévy.
16.) Metrics of urban morphology and their impact on energy consumption: A case study in the United Kingdom. --Javier Urquizo, Carlos Calderón, Philip James.
1.) Seven questions around interdisciplinarity in energy research. --Margot Pellegrino, Marjorie Musy.
User Perceptions of Comfort, Convenience, Willingness
2.) Investigating willingness to save energy and communication about energy use in the American workplace with the attitude-behavior-context model. --Xiaojing Xu, Alexander Maki, Chien-fei Chen, Bing Dong, Julia K. Day.
3.) An integrated approach on energy consumption and indoor environmental quality performance in six Portuguese secondary schools. --Luísa Dias Pereira, Luis Neto, Hermano Bernardo, Manuel Gameiro da Silva.
4.) Upscaling participatory thermal sensing: Lessons from an interdisciplinary case study at University of California for improving campus efficiency and comfort. --Angela Sanguinetti, Marco Pritoni, Kiernan Salmon, Alan Meier, Joshua Morejohn.
5.) Green lift: Exploring the demand response potential of elevators in Danish buildings. --Sergi Rotger-Griful, Rune Hylsberg Jacobsen, Robert S. Brewer, Mia Kruse Rasmussen.
6.) Tackling the interplay of occupants’ heating practices and building physics: Insights from a German mixed methods study. --Anna Wolff, Ines Weber, Bernhard Gill, Johannes Schubert, Michael Schneider.
Barriers and Appropriation of Innovation for Energy Efficiency Technologies
7.) A systematic review of strategies for overcoming the barriers to energy-efficient technologies in buildings. --Dale E. Yeatts, Dana Auden, Christy Cooksey, Chien-Fei Chen.
8.) Convenience and energy consumption in the smart home of the future: Industry visions from Australia and beyond. --Yolande Strengers, Larissa Nicholls.
9.) Of comfort and cost: Examining indoor comfort conditions and guests’ valuations in Italian hotel rooms. --Tiziana Buso, Federico Dell’Anna, Cristina Becchio, Marta C. Bottero, Stefano P. Corgnati.
Stakeholder Perceptions of Design, Construction, and Refurbishment
10.) Ambitions at work: Professional practices and the energy performance of non-residential buildings in Norway. --Ida Nilstad Pettersen, Elli Verhulst, Roberto Valle Kinloch, Antje Junghans, Thomas Berker.
11.) The Living Lab methodology for complex environments: Insights from the thermal refurbishment of a historical district in the city of Cahors, France. --Sophie Claude, Stéphane Ginestet, Marion Bonhomme, Nicolas Moulène, Gilles Escadeillas.
12.) Evaluating the complex governance arrangements surrounding energy retrofitting programs: The case of collective ownership buildings in France. --Sophie Buessler, Dominique Badariotti, Christiane Weber.
13.) Putting the green into corrections: Improving energy conservation, building function, safety and occupant well-being in an American correctional facility. --Jennifer Eileen Cross, Tara O’Conner Shelley, Adam P. Mayer.
Multi-scale and Multi-method Approaches
14.) Designing for residents: Building monitoring and co-creation in social housing renovation in the Netherlands. --O. Guerra-Santin, S. Boess, T. Konstantinou, N. Romero Herrera, S. Silvester.
15.) Modeling and mapping domestic energy behavior: Insights from a consumer survey in France. --Alexis Bourgeois, Margot Pellegrino, Jean-Pierre Lévy.
16.) Metrics of urban morphology and their impact on energy consumption: A case study in the United Kingdom. --Javier Urquizo, Carlos Calderón, Philip James.
Pellegrino, Margot - Personal Name
Bourgeois, Alexis - Personal Name
Santin, O. Guerra - Personal Name
Cross, Jennifer Eileen - Personal Name
Buessler, Sophie - Personal Name
Claude, Sophie - Personal Name
Pettersen, Ida Nilstad - Personal Name
Buso, Tiziana - Personal Name
Strengers, Yolande - Personal Name
Yeatts, Dale E. - Personal Name
Wolff, Anna - Personal Name
Griful, Sergi Rotger - Personal Name
Sanguinetti, Angela - Personal Name
Pereira, Luísa Dias - Personal Name
Xiaojing Xu - Personal Name
Urquizo, Javier - Personal Name
Bourgeois, Alexis - Personal Name
Santin, O. Guerra - Personal Name
Cross, Jennifer Eileen - Personal Name
Buessler, Sophie - Personal Name
Claude, Sophie - Personal Name
Pettersen, Ida Nilstad - Personal Name
Buso, Tiziana - Personal Name
Strengers, Yolande - Personal Name
Yeatts, Dale E. - Personal Name
Wolff, Anna - Personal Name
Griful, Sergi Rotger - Personal Name
Sanguinetti, Angela - Personal Name
Pereira, Luísa Dias - Personal Name
Xiaojing Xu - Personal Name
Urquizo, Javier - Personal Name
Volume 32, October 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
206 hlm
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