Social comparison and energy conservation: the role of reference groups and room dynamics in a field experiment
对6723名大学宿舍居民进行实地实验,发现基于社会比较的节能反馈效果取决于居民初始用电水平,且单双人间比多人间更易出现向中位数调整的现象。
Abstract This paper presents a non‐price‐based conservation experiment performed among 6723 college dorm residents. We analyse the effectiveness of a behavioural intervention delivered through email, featuring one of two types of social‐comparison‐based energy consumption feedback: a quintile social comparison message and a mean comparison message. The quintile social comparison message ranks residents' relative energy consumption in quintiles, while the mean comparison message compares their consumption to the average. Our results show that the relative effectiveness of these messages depends on residents' baseline consumption patterns. Users in the higher quintiles (fourth and fifth) are more likely to reduce their energy consumption, while those in the lower quintiles (first and second) tend to increase their electricity usage after receiving the messages. We also observe that this adjustment towards the median consumption level appears to be more pronounced in single‐ and double‐student rooms compared to multiple‐student rooms. Using a causal forest approach to examine heterogeneity, we find that certain individual traits and physical factors may influence these room dynamics.