@article{bibcite_36562, author = {Bur{\c c}in Becerik-Gerber and Gale Lucas and Ashrant Aryal and Mohamad Awada and Mario Berg{\'e}s and Sarah L Billington and Olga Boric-Lubecke and Ali Ghahramani and Arsalan Heydarian and Farrokh Jazizadeh and Ruying Liu and Runhe Zhu and Frederick Marks and Shawn Roll and Mirmahdi Seyedrezaei and John E Taylor and Christoph H{\"o}elscher and Azam Khan and Jared Langevin and Matthew Louis Mauriello and Elizabeth Murnane and Haeyoung Noh and Marco Pritoni and Davide Schaumann and Jie Zhao}, title = {Ten questions concerning human-building interaction research for improving the quality of life}, abstract = {

This paper seeks to address ten questions that explore the burgeoning field of Human-Building Interaction (HBI), an interdisciplinary field that represents the next frontier in convergent research and innovation to enable the dynamic interplay of human and building interactional intelligence. The field of HBI builds on several existing efforts in historically separate research fields/communities and aims to understand how buildings affect human outcomes and experiences, as well as how humans interact with, adapt to, and affect the built environment and its systems, to support buildings that can learn, enable adaptation, and evolve at different scales to improve the quality-of-life of its users while optimizing resource usage and service availability. Questions were developed by a diverse group of researchers with backgrounds in design, engineering, computer science, social science, and health science. Answers to these questions draw conclusions from what has been achieved to date as reported in the available literature and establish a foundation for future HBI research. This paper aims to encourage interdisciplinary collaborations in HBI research to change the way people interact with and perceive technology within the context of buildings and inform the design, construction, and operation of next-generation, intelligent built environments. In doing so, HBI research can realize a myriad of benefits for human users, including improved productivity, health, cognition, convenience, and comfort, all of which are essential to societal well-being.

}, year = {2022}, booktitle = {Building and Environment}, journal = {Building and Environment}, series = {Building and Environment}, volume = {226}, pages = {109681}, month = {12/2022}, institution = {Elsevier BV}, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, issn = {0360-1323}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2022.109681}, doi = {10.1016/j.buildenv.2022.109681}, }