Towards Personalization of User Preferences in Partially Observable Smart Home Environments
This addresses comfort issues for smart home users with diverse preferences, but it is incremental as it builds on existing methods for personalization in partially observable environments.
The paper tackles the problem of personalizing thermal preferences in smart homes with multiple occupants by proposing a Bayesian Reinforcement Learning framework that identifies users based on temperature and humidity preferences across activities, achieving high accuracy in approximating user belief states.
The technologies used in smart homes have recently improved to learn the user preferences from feedback in order to enhance the user convenience and quality of experience. Most smart homes learn a uniform model to represent the thermal preferences of users, which generally fails when the pool of occupants includes people with different sensitivities to temperature, for instance due to age and physiological factors. Thus, a smart home with a single optimal policy may fail to provide comfort when a new user with a different preference is integrated into the home. In this paper, we propose a Bayesian Reinforcement learning framework that can approximate the current occupant state in a partially observable smart home environment using its thermal preference, and then identify the occupant as a new user or someone is already known to the system. Our proposed framework can be used to identify users based on the temperature and humidity preferences of the occupant when performing different activities to enable personalization and improve comfort. We then compare the proposed framework with a baseline long short-term memory learner that learns the thermal preference of the user from the sequence of actions which it takes. We perform these experiments with up to 5 simulated human models each based on hierarchical reinforcement learning. The results show that our framework can approximate the belief state of the current user just by its temperature and humidity preferences across different activities with a high degree of accuracy.