86,740 research outputs found

    Occupancy detection in smart home space using interoperable building automation technologies

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    To detect whether people are occupying individual rooms in a smart home, a range of sensors and building automation technologies can be employed. For these technologies to function in tandem and exchange useful data in a smart home environment, they must be interoperable. The article presents a new interoperable solution which combines existing decentralized KNX building automation technology with a KNX/LabVIEW software application gateway using visible light communication to track occupancy in a room. The article also describes a novel KNX/IoT software application gateway which uses an MQTT protocol for interoperability between KNX technology and IBM Watson IoT platform. We conducted an experiment with the originally designed solution to detect occupancy in an office room. We used KNX and BACnet building automation technology to produce an interoperable KNX/BACnet hardware gateway which allowed the application of artificial neural network mathematical methods for CO2 waveform prediction. The best results in detecting occupancy in a room were R = 0.9548 (Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm), R = 0.9872 (Bayesian regularization algorithm), and R = 0.8409 (scaled conjugate gradient algorithm), which correspond to the results obtained by other authors and a minimum system prediction accuracy of 96%.Web of Science12art. no. 4

    An aesthetics of touch: investigating the language of design relating to form

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    How well can designers communicate qualities of touch? This paper presents evidence that they have some capability to do so, much of which appears to have been learned, but at present make limited use of such language. Interviews with graduate designer-makers suggest that they are aware of and value the importance of touch and materiality in their work, but lack a vocabulary to fully relate to their detailed explanations of other aspects such as their intent or selection of materials. We believe that more attention should be paid to the verbal dialogue that happens in the design process, particularly as other researchers show that even making-based learning also has a strong verbal element to it. However, verbal language alone does not appear to be adequate for a comprehensive language of touch. Graduate designers-makers’ descriptive practices combined non-verbal manipulation within verbal accounts. We thus argue that haptic vocabularies do not simply describe material qualities, but rather are situated competences that physically demonstrate the presence of haptic qualities. Such competencies are more important than groups of verbal vocabularies in isolation. Design support for developing and extending haptic competences must take this wide range of considerations into account to comprehensively improve designers’ capabilities
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