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Perceived Usefulness, Perceived Ease of Use, and User Acceptance of
Information Technology |
F.D.
Davis
MIS Quarterly, 13,
1989, 319-340.
Valid measurement
scales for predicting user acceptance of computers are in short supply.
Most subjective measures used in practice are unvalidated, and their
relationship to system usage is unknown. The present research develops
and validates new scales for two specific variables, perceived
usefulness and perceived ease of use, which are hypothesized to be
fundamental determinants of user acceptance. Definitions for these two
variables were used to develop scale items that were pretested for
content validity and then tested for reliability and construct validity
in two studies involving a total of 152 users and four application
programs. The measures were refined and streamlined, resulting in two
six-item scales with reliabilities of .98 for usefulness and .94 for
ease of use. The scales exhibited high convergent, discriminant, and
factorial validity. Perceived usefulness was significantly correlated
with both selfreported current usage (r=.63, Study 1) and self-predicted
future usage (r =.85, Study 2). Perceived ease of use was also
significantly correlated with current usage (r=.45, Study 1) and future
usage (r=.59, Study 2). In both studies, usefulness had a significantly
greater correlation with usage behavior than did ease of use. Regression
analyses suggest that perceived ease of use may actually be a causal
antecedent to perceived usefulness, as opposed to a parallel, direct
determinant of system usage. Implications are drawn for future research
on user acceptance.
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