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Determinants
of Perceived Ease of Use: Integrating Perceived Behavioral Control,
Computer Anxiety and Enjoyment into the Technology Acceptance Model |
V.
Venkatesh
Information Systems Research, 11, 2000, 342-365.
Much previous research has been established that perceived ease or
use is an important factor influencing user acceptance and usage
behavior of information technologies. However, very little research
has been conducted to understand how that perception forms and
changes over time. The current work presents and tests an anchoring
and adjustment-based theoretical model of the determinants of the
system-specific perceived ease of use. The model proposes control
(internal and external-conceptualized as computer self-efficacy
and facilitating conditions, respectively), intrinsic motivation
(conceptualized as computer playfulness), and emotion (conceptualized
as computer anxiety) as anchors that determine early perceptions
about the ease of use of a new system. With increasing experience,
it is expected that system-specific perceived ease of use, while
still anchored to the general beliefs regarding computers and computer
use, will adjust to reflect objective usability, perceptions of
external control specific to the new system environment, and system-specific
perceived enjoyment. The proposed model was tested in three different
organizations among 246 employees using three measurements taken
over a three-month period. The proposed model was strongly supported
at all points of measurement, and explained up to 60% of the variance
in system-specific perceived ease of use, which is twice as much
as our current understanding. Important theoretical and practical
implications of these findings are discussed.
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