Author List: Chau, Patrick Y. K.; Hu, Paul J.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2002, Volume 18, Issue 4, Page 191-229.
The recent proliferation of information technology designed to support or enhance an individual professional's task performance has made the investigation of technology acceptance increasingly challenging and significant. This study investigates technology acceptance by individual professionals by examining physicians' decision to accept telemedicine technology. Synthesized from relevant prior research, a generic research framework was built to provide a necessary foundation upon which a research model for telemedicine technology acceptance by physicians could be developed. The research model was then empirically examined, using data collected from more than 400 physicians practicing in public tertiary hospitals in Hong Kong. Results of the study suggest several areas where individual "professionals" might subtly differ in their technology acceptance decision-making, as compared with end users and business managers in ordinary business settings. Specifically, physicians appeared to be fairly pragmatic, largely anchoring their acceptance decisions in the usefulness of the technology rather than its ease of use. When making decisions to accept a technology, physicians expressed considerable concerns about the compatibility of the technology with their practices, placed less importance on controlling technology operations, and attached limited weight to peers' opinions about using the technology. Based on results obtained from this study, the initially proposed framework for technology acceptance by individual professionals was revised to a "hierarchical, three-layer" structure with the individual context at the inner core, the implementation context on the outermost layer, and the technological context residing in the middle. Implications for information systems research and telemedicine management practice that have emerged from the study's findings are also discussed.
Keywords: acceptance of information technology; adoption of information technology; professional users; telemedicine technology manage merit.
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#155 0.376 technology research information individual context acceptance use technologies suggests need better personality factors new traits telemedicine adoption examined does management
#108 0.183 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#26 0.082 business large organizations using work changing rapidly make today's available designed need increasingly recent manage years activity important allow achieve
#8 0.057 decision making decisions decision-making makers use quality improve performance managers process better results time managerial task significantly help indicate maker