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Han Li

Researcher at University of New Mexico

Publications -  45
Citations -  2689

Han Li is an academic researcher from University of New Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Information privacy & The Internet. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 42 publications receiving 2208 citations. Previous affiliations of Han Li include Minnesota State University Moorhead & Virginia State University.

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Examining multi-dimensional trust and multi-faceted risk in initial acceptance of emerging technologies: An empirical study of mobile banking services

TL;DR: Results of this study indicate that risk perception, derived from eight different facets, is a salient antecedent to innovative technology acceptance and provides empirical support for employing personal trait factors in analyzing acceptance of emerging IT artifacts.
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The role of affect and cognition on online consumers' decision to disclose personal information to unfamiliar online vendors

TL;DR: It is found that, initial emotions formed from an overall impression of a Web site act as initial hurdles to information disclosure and once online consumers enter the information exchange stage, fairness-based levers further adjust privacy beliefs.
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Understanding compliance with internet use policy from the perspective of rational choice theory

TL;DR: Rational choice theory is applied to examine how employees' intention to comply with Internet use policy is driven by cost-benefit assessments, personal norms and organizational context factors, and indicates that employees' compliance intention is the result of competing influences of perceived benefits, formal sanctions, and security risks.
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Understanding Situational Online Information Disclosure as a Privacy Calculus

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that, in the context of an e-commerce transaction with an unfamiliar vendor, information disclosure is the result of competing influences of exchange benefits and two types of privacy beliefs (privacy protection belief and privacy risk belief).
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Impact of perceived technical protection on security behaviors

TL;DR: Perceived technical protection affects behavioral intentions both indirectly, through PBC, and directly, and suggests possible risk compensation effects in the information security context.