Artworks that display the real time usage of key resources such as electricity
offer new strategies to conserve energy. These eco-visualisations-or artworks that
creatively visualise ecologically significant data in real time-represent a substantial
contribution to new knowledge about dynamic feedback as a tool to promote energy
conservation and environmental site-based learning in this interdisciplinary project that
expands and builds on prior findings from the fields of art, design, environmental
psychology, and human computer interaction (HCI).
The aims of this research endeavor were to locate answers to the following
questions related to energy conservation in various public contexts. Might dynamic
feedback from data-driven artwork create a better understanding of resource
consumption patterns? Which environments are best for promoting eco-visualisation:
borne, workplace, or alternative spaces? What kinds of visualisation tactics are most
effective in communicating energy consumption data? These initial questions
generated a four-year research project that involved an extensive literature review in
both environmental psychology and art history that culminated in three different case
studies, which targeted the effectiveness of eco-visualisation as an innovative
conservation strategy. The three primary claims to be proven with supporting evidence
from the literature reviews and case studies are: (1) eco-visualisation offers novel visual
ways of making invisible energy data comprehensible, and encourages site-based
learning; (2) eco-visualisation that provides real time visual feedback can increase
environmental awareness and possibly increase the conservation behaviour in the
viewing population; (3) eco-visualisation encourages new perceptions of linkages
between the single individual and a larger community via site-based dialogue and
conversation.
Although the results of the three case studies are generally positive and prove
the claims, there are larger social and environmental questions that will be addressed.
How can eco-visualisation be productively integrated into the home or workplace
without becoming a disposable gadget that represents a passing fad or fancy? Most
importantly, how can energy conservation interventions be conceived to be as
sustainable as possible, and non-threatening from a privacy perspective? These
questions and more contribute to the discussion and analysis of the results of the three
case studies that constitute the primary source of new knowledge asserted here in this
dissertation.
Date of Award | 2009 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Eco-visualisation: Combining art and technology to reduce energy consumption
Holmes, T. (Author). 2009
Student thesis: PhD