TY - GEN
T1 - A socially intelligent approach to consumers' collective capabilities in smart grids
AU - Bagheri-Moghaddam, Faezeh
AU - Oliveira, Sonja
AU - Atkins, Ed
AU - Chatzimichali, Anna
PY - 2023/12/6
Y1 - 2023/12/6
N2 - There is a pressing need to investigate consumers' social relations within energy systems particularly in the context of socially smart grids at the domestic level. However, no studies to date have categorised or explained how such social relations manifest and what role different consumers play in managing home energy demand. This work provides for the first time, a categorisation of household archetypes through the social relations that govern them. This study draws on mixed data including a large-scale ethno-visual survey and interviews conducted with energy consumers in Glasgow and Bristol, UK. The analysis forms part of a wider study which integrates social identity theory (SIT), practice theory and rhythm-analysis. We primarily focus on insights derived from SIT as an approach to identifying consumers' capabilities in smart energy systems and Home Energy Management (HEM) through a study of social relations. The findings reveal novel perspectives on how social identities shape HEM patterns and how the consequent socio-spatial and technical implications play a role in future demand reduction and the development of socially smart grids. The contribution of this study is two-fold; firstly, to demonstrate how prioritising social practices, identities, and rhythm-analysis can lead to novel interventions in smart grids and redefine the roles of the community, and neighbourhoods, and secondly to discuss the policy implications for planning future automated demand management via the acquisition of new socio-spatial insights into how diverse social identities and practices can foster just transitions and equitable energy futures in the UK and beyond.
AB - There is a pressing need to investigate consumers' social relations within energy systems particularly in the context of socially smart grids at the domestic level. However, no studies to date have categorised or explained how such social relations manifest and what role different consumers play in managing home energy demand. This work provides for the first time, a categorisation of household archetypes through the social relations that govern them. This study draws on mixed data including a large-scale ethno-visual survey and interviews conducted with energy consumers in Glasgow and Bristol, UK. The analysis forms part of a wider study which integrates social identity theory (SIT), practice theory and rhythm-analysis. We primarily focus on insights derived from SIT as an approach to identifying consumers' capabilities in smart energy systems and Home Energy Management (HEM) through a study of social relations. The findings reveal novel perspectives on how social identities shape HEM patterns and how the consequent socio-spatial and technical implications play a role in future demand reduction and the development of socially smart grids. The contribution of this study is two-fold; firstly, to demonstrate how prioritising social practices, identities, and rhythm-analysis can lead to novel interventions in smart grids and redefine the roles of the community, and neighbourhoods, and secondly to discuss the policy implications for planning future automated demand management via the acquisition of new socio-spatial insights into how diverse social identities and practices can foster just transitions and equitable energy futures in the UK and beyond.
KW - Collective Capabilities
KW - Home Energy management
KW - Rhythms-analysis
KW - Smart Energy Systems
KW - Social Relation
KW - Socially Intelligent
KW - Socially Smart Grids
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85180736554&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/SmartGridComm57358.2023.10333929
DO - 10.1109/SmartGridComm57358.2023.10333929
M3 - Chapter in a published conference proceeding
AN - SCOPUS:85180736554
SN - 9781665455572
T3 - 2023 IEEE International Conference on Communications, Control, and Computing Technologies for Smart Grids, SmartGridComm 2023 - Proceedings
BT - 2023 IEEE International Conference on Communications, Control, and Computing Technologies for Smart Grids, SmartGridComm 2023 - Proceedings
PB - IEEE
CY - U. S. A.
T2 - 14th IEEE International Conference on Communications, Control, and Computing Technologies for Smart Grids, SmartGridComm 2023
Y2 - 31 October 2023 through 3 November 2023
ER -