Author List: Chau, Patrick Y.K.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 1996, Volume 13, Issue 2, Page 185-204.
The technology acceptance model (TAM) is one of the most influential research models in studies of the determinants of information systems/information technology (IS/IT) acceptance. In TAM, perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use are hypothesized and empirically supported as fundamental determinants of user acceptance of a given IS/IT. A review of the IS and psychology literature, however, suggests that perceived usefulness can be of two distinct types: near-term usefulness and long-term usefulness. This paper reviews the concept of perceived usefulness and modifies TAM to include the two types of perceived usefulness. Data collected from nearly 285 administrative/clerical staff in a large organization were tested against the modified model using the structural equation modeling approach. The results of the study showed that, even though perceived near-term usefulness had the most significant influence on the behavioral intention to use a technology, perceived long-term usefulness also exerted a positive, though lesser, impact. No significant, direct relationship was found between ease of use and behavioral intention to use a technology. Implications of the findings and future research areas are discussed.
Keywords: perceived ease of information systems use;perceived usefulness of information systems;structural equation modeling;technology acceptance model
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#99 0.518 perceived usefulness acceptance use technology ease model usage tam study beliefs intention user intentions users behavioral perceptions determinants constructs studies
#108 0.167 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#134 0.080 users end use professionals user organizations applications needs packages findings perform specialists technical computing direct future selection ability help software
#292 0.055 information research literature systems framework review paper theoretical based potential future implications practice discussed current concept propositions findings provided extant