User Acceptance of Information Technology: Toward a Unified View

@article{Venkatesh2003UserAO,
  title={User Acceptance of Information Technology: Toward a Unified View},
  author={V. Venkatesh and Michael G. Morris and Gordon B. Davis and Fred D. Davis},
  journal={Institutions \& Transition Economics: Microeconomic Issues eJournal},
  year={2003},
  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:14435677}
}
TAUT provides a useful tool for managers needing to assess the likelihood of success for new technology introductions and helps them understand the drivers of acceptance in order to proactively design interventions targeted at populations of users that may be less inclined to adopt and use new systems.

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User Acceptance of E-Commerce Technology: A Meta-Analytic Comparison of Competing Models

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Davis' Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) (1989)

This chapter reviews the literature about the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), which is an information systems models theory that explain how users come to accept use a technology determined. The

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A more comprehensive, yet parsimonious model of technology acceptance is presented and it is suggested testing it both in public and private sectors to help understand the similarities and differences between the two sectors.
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This paper focuses on individual's perceptions about the characteristics of the target technology as explanatory and predictive variables for acceptance behavior, and presents an empirical study examining the effects of these perceptions on two frequently used outcomes in the context of the innovation represented by the World Wide Web.

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Both one’s own attitude and the expectations of others influenced the degree to which one used IT after adoption, and the most significant perceptions that had an effect on degree of use were ease of use, relative advantage and compatibility.

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The ability to predict peoples' computer acceptance from a measure of their intentions, and the ability to explain their intentions in terms of their attitudes, subjective norms, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, and related variables are addressed.

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A new construct, personal innovativeness in the domain of information technology, is hypothesized to exhibit moderating effects on the antecedents as well as the consequences of individual perceptions about a new information technology.

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This study compares two models that predict an individual's intention to use an IS: the technology acceptance model TAM and the theory of planned behavior TPB.

Determinants of Perceived Ease of Use: Integrating Control, Intrinsic Motivation, and Emotion into the Technology Acceptance Model

This work presents and tests an anchoring and adjustment-based theoretical model of the determinants of system-specific perceived ease of use, and proposes control, intrinsic motivation, and emotion as anchors that determine early perceptions about the ease ofuse of a new system.
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