Author List: van der Heijden, Hans;
MIS Quarterly, 2004, Volume 28, Issue 4, Page 695-704.
This paper studies the differences in user acceptance models for productivity-oriented (or utilitarian) and pleasure-oriented (or hedonic) information systems. Hedonic information systems aim to provide self-fulfilling rather than instrumental value to the user, are strongly connected to home and leisure activities, focus on the fun-aspect of using information systems, and encourage prolonged rather than productive use. The paper reports a cross-sectional survey on the usage intentions for one hedonic information system. Analysis of this sample supports the hypotheses that perceived enjoyment and perceived ease of use are stronger determinants of intentions to use than perceived usefulness. The paper concludes that the hedonic nature of an information system is an important boundary condition to the validity of the technology acceptance model. Specifically, perceived usefulness loses its dominant predictive value in favor of ease of use and enjoyment.
Keywords: hedonic information systems; perceived ease of use; perceived enjoyment; perceived usefulness; technology acceptance model; User acceptance
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#99 0.565 perceived usefulness acceptance use technology ease model usage tam study beliefs intention user intentions users behavioral perceptions determinants constructs studies
#77 0.196 information systems paper use design case important used context provide presented authors concepts order number various underlying implementation framework nature
#276 0.108 satisfaction information systems study characteristics data results using user related field survey empirical quality hypotheses important success various indicate tested