Author List: Lewis, William; Agarwal, Ritu; Sambamurthy, Vallabh;
MIS Quarterly, 2003, Volume 27, Issue 4, Page 657-678.
Individual beliefs about technology use have been shown to have a profound impact on subsequent behaviors toward information technology (IT). This research note builds upon and extends prior research examining factors that influence key individual beliefs about technology use. It is argued that individuals form beliefs about their use of information technologies within a broad milieu of influences emanating from the individual, institutional, and social contexts in which they interact with IT. We examine the simultaneous effects of these three sets of influences on beliefs about usefulness and ease of use in the context of a contemporary technology targeted at autonomous knowledge workers. Our findings suggest that beliefs about technology use can be influenced by top management commitment to new technology and the individual factors of personal innovativeness and self-efficacy. Surprisingly, social influences from multiple sources exhibited no significant effects. Theoretical and practical implications are offered.
Keywords: belief antecedents; Technology adoption; technology beliefs
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#153 0.266 usage use self-efficacy social factors individual findings influence organizations beliefs individuals support anxiety technology workplace key outcome behavior contextual longitudinal
#116 0.222 research study influence effects literature theoretical use understanding theory using impact behavior insights examine influences mechanisms specifically context perspective findings
#155 0.208 technology research information individual context acceptance use technologies suggests need better personality factors new traits telemedicine adoption examined does management
#220 0.164 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide
#99 0.052 perceived usefulness acceptance use technology ease model usage tam study beliefs intention user intentions users behavioral perceptions determinants constructs studies