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A
Critical Assessment of Potential Measurement Biases in the Technology
Acceptance Model: Three Experiments |
F.D.
Davis and V. Venkatesh
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 45, 1996, 19-45.
The Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) is widely used by researchers
and practitioners to predict and explain user acceptance of information
technologies. TAM models system usage intentions and behavior as
a function of perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use. The
original scales for measuring the TAM constructs have been confirmed
to be reliable and valid in several replications and applications
spanning a range of technologies and user populations. However,
a measurement bias may be present because the TAM instrument physically
groups together the multiple items measuring each individual construct.
Many scholars of instrument design would object to such item grouping,
instead advocating that items from different constructs be intermixed
in order to reduce "carryover" effects among the responses
to multiple items targeting a specific construct, which might artificially
inflate the observed reliability and validity. Three experiments
involving two systems and a total of 708 subjects are reported
which address whether such carryover biases are present in the
TAM measures. All three studies found that item grouping vs. item
intermixing had no significant effect (positive or negative) either
on the high levels of reliability and validity of the TAM scales,
or on the path coefficients linking them together. Ironically,
open-ended verbal evaluations indicated that subjects were more
confused and annoyed when items were intermixed, suggesting a tendency
toward "output interference" effects, which themselves
could have a biasing effect. Our findings suggest that those who
employ the TAM measures should continue using the original (grouped)
format in order to best predict and explain user acceptance of
information technology.
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