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Consumer Acceptance and Use of Information Technology: Extending the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology
TLDR
In this paper, the authors extended the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) to study acceptance of technology in a consumer context and proposed UTAUT2 incorporating three constructs into UTAAUT: hedonic motivation, price value, and habit.Abstract:
This paper extends the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) to study acceptance and use of technology in a consumer context. Our proposed UTAUT2 incorporates three constructs into UTAUT: hedonic motivation, price value, and habit. Individual differences — namely, age, gender, and experience — are hypothesized to moderate the effects of these constructs on behavioral intention and technology use. Results from a two-stage online survey, with technology use data collected four months after the first survey, of 1,512 mobile Internet consumers supported our model. Compared to UTAUT, the extensions proposed in UTAUT2 produced a substantial improvement in the variance explained in behavioral intention (56 percent to 74 percent) and technology use (40 percent to 52 percent). The theoretical and managerial implications of these results are discussed.read more
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Viewpoint: Understanding the Internet banking adoption: A unified theory of acceptance and use of technology and perceived risk application
TL;DR: A conceptual model that combines unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) with perceived risk with respect to usage behaviour of Internet banking is developed and some relationships of UTAUT are supported.
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Re-examining the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT): Towards a Revised Theoretical Model
TL;DR: An alternative theoretical model for explaining the acceptance and use of information system (IS) and information technology (IT) innovations was formalized and the empirical model was empirically examined using a combination of meta-analysis and structural equation modelling techniques.
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Factors influencing adoption of mobile banking by Jordanian bank customers
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the factors influencing behavioral intentions and adoption of mobile banking by Jordanian bank customers using extended unified theory of acceptance and use (UTAUT2) as a basic model.
Factors influencing acceptance of technology for aging in place
Hubertus J. M. Vrijhoef,Sebastiaan Theodorus Michaël Peek,Joost van Hoof,Katrien Luijkx,Hennie Boeije,Eveline Wouters +5 more
TL;DR: Post-implementation research on technology acceptance by community-dwelling older adults is scarce and most of the factors in this review have not been tested by using quantitative methods, so further research is needed to determine if and how the factors are interrelated, and how they relate to existing models of technology acceptance.
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Understanding mobile banking
Goncalo Baptista,Tiago Oliveira +1 more
TL;DR: An innovative and comprehensive theoretical model that combines the extended unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT2) of Venkatesh, Thong, and Xu, with cultural moderators from Hofstede is proposed, providing new insights into factors affecting the acceptation and how culture influences individual use behaviour.
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An Integrated Model of Information Systems Adoption in Small Businesses
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an integrated model of information systems adoption in small businesses based on theories from the technological innovation literature, which specifies contextual variables such as decision-maker characteristics, IS characteristics, organizational characteristics, and environmental characteristics as primary determinants of IS adoption, and found that small businesses with certain CEO characteristics (innovativeness and level of IS knowledge), innovation characteristics (relative advantage, compatibility, and complexity of IS), and organizational characteristics (business size and the level of employees' IS knowledge) are more likely to adopt IS.
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Future Management Theory: A “Comparative” Evolution to a General Theory
TL;DR: Eleven existing management theory streams can be reduced to four concurrently and sequentially developing ones.