posted on 2019-08-02, 14:10authored byAndy Crabtree, Lewis Hyland, Joel Fischer, Martin Flintham, James Colley, Hyosun Kwon
This paper presents findings from the deployment of a technology probe – the
connected shower – and implications for the development of ‘living services’ or autonomous
context-aware consumer-oriented IoT services that exploit sensing to gain consumer ‘insight’ and
drive personalised service innovation. It contributes to the literature on water sustainability and the
potential role and barriers to the adoption of smart showers in domestic life. It also contributes to
our understanding of context, which enables user activity to be discriminated and elaborated
thereby furnishing the ‘insight’ living services require for their successful operation.
Problematically, however, our study shows that context is not a property of sensor data. Rather
than provide contextual insights into showering, the sensor data requires contextualisation to
discriminate and elaborate user activity. Thus, in addition to examining the potential of the
connected shower in everyday life, we consider how sensor data is contextualised through the
doing of data work and the relevance of its interactional accomplishment and organisation to the
design of living services.
Funding
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council EP/N005945/1
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council EP/N014243/1
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council EP/M001636/1
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Springer under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/