Using rule mining to understand appliance energy consumption patterns

Sami Rollins, Nilanjan Banerjee
2014 2014 IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom)  
Managing energy in the home is key to creating a sustainable future for our society. More tools are increasingly available to measure home energy usage, however these tools provide little insight into questions such as why an appliance consumes more energy than normal or what kinds of behavioral changes might be most likely to reduce energy usage in the home. To answer these questions, a deeper understanding of the causal factors that influence energy usage is necessary. In this work, we
more » ... a broad study of factors that influence energy consumption of individual devices in the home. Our first contribution is collection of a context-rich data set from six homes across the United States. The second contribution of this work is a set of insights into key factors influencing energy usage derived by the novel application of a rule mining algorithm to identify significant associations between energy usage and four key features: hour of the day, day of the week, use of other appliances in the home, and user-supplied annotations of activities such as working or cooking. Our analysis confirms our hypothesis that, though most devices show a regular pattern of daily or weekly use, this is not true for all devices. Associations that relate use of two different devices in the same home are often stronger, and are observed for nearly 25% of device uses. Overall, we observe that the associations derived from the first five weeks of data in our data set are sufficient to explain nearly 70% of the device uses in the subsequent five weeks of data, and over 90% of the associations identified during the first five weeks recur in the latter portion of the data set. The associations identified by our approach may be used to to aid in end-user applications that heighten awareness and encourage energy savings, improve energy disaggregation algorithms, or even detect anomalous uses that may signal problems in aging-in-place homes.
doi:10.1109/percom.2014.6813940 dblp:conf/percom/RollinsB14 fatcat:a34riotybvdwdifkxplrw6zchy