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POE 2.0: exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations

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POE 2.0: exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations. / Dalton, Ruth; Kuliga, Saskia Felizitas; Hoelscher, Christoph.
In: Intelligent Buildings International, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2013, p. 162-180.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Dalton, R, Kuliga, SF & Hoelscher, C 2013, 'POE 2.0: exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations', Intelligent Buildings International, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 162-180. https://doi.org/10.1080/17508975.2013.800813

APA

Vancouver

Dalton R, Kuliga SF, Hoelscher C. POE 2.0: exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations. Intelligent Buildings International. 2013;5(3):162-180. doi: 10.1080/17508975.2013.800813

Author

Dalton, Ruth ; Kuliga, Saskia Felizitas ; Hoelscher, Christoph. / POE 2.0 : exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations. In: Intelligent Buildings International. 2013 ; Vol. 5, No. 3. pp. 162-180.

Bibtex

@article{fb643592feb04e0db8cf5ec890dd2204,
title = "POE 2.0: exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations",
abstract = "This paper presents a scoping study in which unsolicited, user feedback of Seattle Public Library was gathered from selected social media and user-review websites to determine the viability of utilising social media as a novel and unconventional approach to POE. Fourteen social media/review websites were surveyed and all available review-data were extracted. This resulted in a rich dataset of almost 500 reviews, which were subject to further analyses of temporal and geographic patterns, numerical ratings and the semantic content of the reviews. The study{\textquoteright}s results suggest building users are quite willing to share, without solicitation, their experiences. The results showed: a high proportion of local reviewers (40%); highly regular, temporal patterns of posting, suggesting a sustained interest in reviewing over a period of seven years; numerical ratings suggesting that comments were not dominated by highly opinionated, extreme reviewers but represented a broad range of views; geographic differences in the semantic content of the reviews. The paper suggests that highly valuable information is currently available from peer-to-peer networks and that this forms a new class of POE-data which is radically different to current POE paradigms. It concludes that this data might be most valuable through augmenting, and not supplanting, traditional POE.",
keywords = "Post-Occupancy Evaluation, Evidence-Based Design, Human Behaviour, Human-Computer Interaction, Occupants- Feedback",
author = "Ruth Dalton and Kuliga, {Saskia Felizitas} and Christoph Hoelscher",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1080/17508975.2013.800813",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "162--180",
journal = "Intelligent Buildings International",
issn = "1750-8975",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - POE 2.0

T2 - exploring the potential of social media for capturing unsolicited post occupancy evaluations

AU - Dalton, Ruth

AU - Kuliga, Saskia Felizitas

AU - Hoelscher, Christoph

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - This paper presents a scoping study in which unsolicited, user feedback of Seattle Public Library was gathered from selected social media and user-review websites to determine the viability of utilising social media as a novel and unconventional approach to POE. Fourteen social media/review websites were surveyed and all available review-data were extracted. This resulted in a rich dataset of almost 500 reviews, which were subject to further analyses of temporal and geographic patterns, numerical ratings and the semantic content of the reviews. The study’s results suggest building users are quite willing to share, without solicitation, their experiences. The results showed: a high proportion of local reviewers (40%); highly regular, temporal patterns of posting, suggesting a sustained interest in reviewing over a period of seven years; numerical ratings suggesting that comments were not dominated by highly opinionated, extreme reviewers but represented a broad range of views; geographic differences in the semantic content of the reviews. The paper suggests that highly valuable information is currently available from peer-to-peer networks and that this forms a new class of POE-data which is radically different to current POE paradigms. It concludes that this data might be most valuable through augmenting, and not supplanting, traditional POE.

AB - This paper presents a scoping study in which unsolicited, user feedback of Seattle Public Library was gathered from selected social media and user-review websites to determine the viability of utilising social media as a novel and unconventional approach to POE. Fourteen social media/review websites were surveyed and all available review-data were extracted. This resulted in a rich dataset of almost 500 reviews, which were subject to further analyses of temporal and geographic patterns, numerical ratings and the semantic content of the reviews. The study’s results suggest building users are quite willing to share, without solicitation, their experiences. The results showed: a high proportion of local reviewers (40%); highly regular, temporal patterns of posting, suggesting a sustained interest in reviewing over a period of seven years; numerical ratings suggesting that comments were not dominated by highly opinionated, extreme reviewers but represented a broad range of views; geographic differences in the semantic content of the reviews. The paper suggests that highly valuable information is currently available from peer-to-peer networks and that this forms a new class of POE-data which is radically different to current POE paradigms. It concludes that this data might be most valuable through augmenting, and not supplanting, traditional POE.

KW - Post-Occupancy Evaluation

KW - Evidence-Based Design

KW - Human Behaviour

KW - Human-Computer Interaction

KW - Occupants- Feedback

U2 - 10.1080/17508975.2013.800813

DO - 10.1080/17508975.2013.800813

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 162

EP - 180

JO - Intelligent Buildings International

JF - Intelligent Buildings International

SN - 1750-8975

IS - 3

ER -