About this Research Topic
Although several methods have been used to model the presence and actions of occupants in buildings for different purposes in the last four decades, there are still limited general procedures and guidelines to evaluate proposed user-related behavior models. Given this context, this Research Topic aims to nourish a deeper discourse and disseminate information in this area with the aim of improving energy building performance assessments with effective representation of occupant behavior. It hopes to collect valid and informative examples of the integration of behavior models in tools and processes, and improve their capability of quantifying human impact on energy usage in buildings. Research across sensing and social and behavioral data can help model and quantify the impact of occupant behavior on building energy usage also at a neighborhood, regional, or an urban scale.
Authors are invited to focus on the following topics:
• Modeling occupant presence (occupancy detection, estimation, and prediction)
• Modeling occupant interactions with building interfaces (window, blinds, lighting operation, and thermostat adjustment)
• Modeling occupant interactions with building systems (HVAC, heating/cooling, DHW, and appliances)
• Activity profiling and occupancy patterns
• Simulated and actual energy consumption
• Indoor environmental parameters in the context of energy-related occupant actions and preferences
• Occupant-centric urban data processing and data driven modeling
• Applications of occupant behavior models in design, evaluation, and operation optimization
• Policy and social implications of occupant behavior modeling in buildings
Keywords: Occupant Behavior, Building Energy Use, Energy Building Performance, Modeling Occupant Presence, Modeling Occupant Interaction, Building Energy Consumption
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.