Litcius/Paper detail

What improves smart meters' implementation? A statistical meta-analysis on smart meters' acceptance

Jonathan Gumz, Diego Castro Fettermann

2021Smart and Sustainable Built Environment26 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose This article aims to compare smart meters' acceptance studies worldwide to consolidate trends and highlight factors that are not a consensus. Design/methodology/approach This work performs a statistical meta-analysis, using the Hunter–Schmidt method and the UTAUT2 model, of the factors of acceptance of smart meters in the world literature. A meta-regression was also conducted to verify the moderation exercised by gender, level of education and timeline context of the articles. Findings The main results point to hedonic motivation, performance expectancy and effort expectancy as the leading influencers for smart meter's acceptance. Meta-regression indicates that the influence is more significant among the male gender and that over the years, the social influence must gain weight in the smart meter's acceptance. Social implications Specific strategies are suggested to improve projects for the implementation of smart meters based on the obtained results. Originality/value The contribution given by this work is relevant, considering it is the first meta-analysis focused on smart meters' acceptance published in the literature

Topics & Concepts

Unified theory of acceptance and use of technologyExpectancy theoryContext (archaeology)TimelineMeta-analysisComputer scienceMeta-regressionSmart meterWork (physics)ModerationApplied psychologyPsychologyStatisticsEngineeringSocial psychologyMathematicsGeographySmart gridArchaeologyElectrical engineeringInternal medicineMechanical engineeringMedicineSmart Grid Energy ManagementSmart Parking Systems ResearchMobile Crowdsensing and Crowdsourcing