Your parents are probably influencing the temperature in your home right now

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Photo by HUUM on Unsplash
Photo by HUUM on Unsplash

How hot or cold our childhood home was likely influences the air conditioning choices we make in our own homes as adults, according to US research. The team surveyed just over 2,000 people from across the US about the temperature they set their heating or cooling to, and what they remember their childhood home was set to. The researchers say the participants' own heating and cooling choices were strongly linked to the temperature they remember from their childhood home. The researchers say the participants' choices also appeared to be influenced by how comfortable they felt in their local community. For example, they say those living in a cold New York winter were more likely to have a cooler home if they felt comfortable and entrenched in the New York community, while those who were less happy there were likely to crank the heating.

Media release

From: PLOS

Why do you keep your house so cold? Science says: Ask your parents

The temperature of your childhood home, among other factors, may help predict your thermostat settings.

Childhood home temperature and community connectedness can help predict how U.S. residents set their thermostats, offering new ways to encourage energy conservation and combat climate change, according to a study published July 3 in the open-access journal PLOS Climate by Dritjon Gruda from the National University of Ireland Maynooth and Paul Hanges from the University of Maryland.

Half of U.S. households’ annual electricity use goes to heating and cooling, but less than half of homeowners tweak their thermostats to save energy throughout the day. Reducing residential energy consumption (which occupies 21% of the U.S. energy pie chart) is therefore a promising strategy for curbing national energy consumption and burning fewer fossil fuels. But first, scientists seek a reliable way to provide evidence for policy makers to incentivize at-home energy conservation.

To investigate why U.S. adults heat and cool their homes the way they do, Gruda and Hanges surveyed 2,128 participants, who reported the average winter thermostat settings in their current and childhood homes. They also rated their emotional connectedness to their current communities, a metric referred to as “community fit.” The researchers controlled for age, gender, and household income, and participants were representative of the U.S. population.

Results indicated that participants’ childhood home temperatures positively predicted their current home temperatures. For example: of people who live in cold-winter locales like New York, those raised in warmer homes tend to dial up their thermostats higher than those reared in cooler abodes.

Additionally, the researchers observed that individuals with a strong sense of community belonging were more likely to align their home temperature settings with others in their community. For example: a New Yorker with strong community ties may keep their indoor climate cooler, while someone less enamored with the Big Apple may turn up the heat.

These results suggest that “policymakers may need to pivot towards campaigns that deeply resonate with the unique identity and values of individual communities” to encourage energy conservation, the researchers state.

The authors acknowledge that community connectedness may not translate directly to energy savings, especially in affluent communities, and encourage longitudinal studies to address household income and other contributing factors.

Summarizing, the authors add: "Community fit determines how low you set your thermostat during winter, and how much heating energy you save."

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PLOS Climate
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Universidade Cato´lica Portuguesa, Portugal
Funder: This work was supported by the School of Business, Maynooth University, Ireland (seed funding provided to DG). Partial funding for open access provided by the UMD Libraries’ Open Access Publishing Fund.
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