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Relating occupant perceived control and thermal comfort: Statistical analysis on the ASHRAE RP-884 database
Journal article

Relating occupant perceived control and thermal comfort: Statistical analysis on the ASHRAE RP-884 database

Jared Langevin, Jin Wen and Patrick L. Gurian
HVAC&R research, v 18(1-2), pp 179-194
01 Feb 2012

Abstract

Construction & Building Technology Engineering Engineering, Mechanical Physical Sciences Science & Technology Technology Thermodynamics
Recent literature has suggested that a building occupant's level of perceived control over their thermal environment plays a significant role in determining their thermal comfort response. The ASHRAE RP-884 report, which led to an optional Adaptive Comfort Standard for use in naturally ventilated office buildings, was a key attempt to identify relationships between perceived control levels and comfort across a large database of occupant responses in the field. Though the study found no conclusive evidence of these relationships, the authors acknowledged that their analytical process involved many questionable assumptions and generalizations, which may have compromised their findings. This study improves upon the RP-884 analysis by taking a more detailed look at three HVAC building studies from within the RP-884 database. Each of these studies contains direct occupant ratings of both perceived control and thermal comfort-ratings that were not available for many of the other RP-884 buildings. Statistical analysis shows that given this detailed focus, significant correlations do indeed appear between key comfort and perceived control variables within the datasets.

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35 citations in Scopus

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#7 Affordable and Clean Energy
#11 Sustainable Cities and Communities
#13 Climate Action

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Web of Science research areas
Construction & Building Technology
Engineering, Mechanical
Thermodynamics
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