Deakin University
Browse

File(s) under permanent embargo

Quality criteria for multi-domain studies in the indoor environment: Critical review towards research guidelines and recommendations

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-08, 22:13 authored by G Chinazzo, RK Andersen, E Azar, VM Barthelmes, C Becchio, L Belussi, C Berger, S Carlucci, SP Corgnati, S Crosby, L Danza, L de Castro, M Favero, S Gauthier, RT Hellwig, Q Jin, J Kim, M Sarey Khanie, D Khovalyg, C Lingua, A Luna-Navarro, A Mahdavi, C Miller, I Mino-Rodriguez, I Pigliautile, AL Pisello, RF Rupp, Abdul-Manan SadickAbdul-Manan Sadick, F Salamone, M Schweiker, M Syndicus, G Spigliantini, NG Vasquez, D Vakalis, M Vellei, S Wei
The perception, physiology, behavior, and performance of building occupants are influenced by multi-domain exposures: the simultaneous presence of multiple environmental stimuli, i.e., visual, thermal, acoustic, and air quality. Despite being extensive, the literature on multi-domain exposures presents heterogeneous methodological approaches and inconsistent study reporting, which hinder direct comparison between studies and meta-analyses. Therefore, in addition to carrying out more multi-domain studies, such investigations need to be designed, conducted, and documented in a systematic and transparent way. With the goal to facilitate and support future multi-domain studies and their meta-analyses, this work provides (1) a range of criteria for multi-domain study design and reporting (i.e., defined as quality criteria), and (2) a critical review of the multi-domain literature based on the described criteria, which can serve as guidelines and recommendations for future studies on the topic. The identified quality criteria encompass study set-up, study deployment and analysis, and study outcome, stressing the importance of adopting a consistent terminology and result reporting style. The developed critical review highlights several shortcomings in the design, deployment, and documentation of multi-domain studies, emphasizing the need for quality improvements of future multi-domain research. The ultimate goal of this work is to consolidate our knowledge on multi-domain exposures for its integration into regulatory resources and guidelines, which are currently dominated by single-domain knowledge.

History

Journal

Building and Environment

Volume

226

Article number

109719

Pagination

109719-109719

ISSN

0360-1323

Language

en

Publisher

Elsevier BV