F.D.
Davis,
R.P. Bagozzi, and P.R Warshaw
Management Science, 35, 1989, 982-1003.
Computer systems cannot improve
organizational performance if they aren't used. Unfortunately, resistance to
end-user systems by managers and professionals is a widespread problem. To
better predict, explain, and increase user acceptance, we need to better
understand why people accept or reject computers. This research addresses
the ability to predict peoples' computer acceptance from a measure of their
intentions, and the ability to explain their intentions in terms of their
attitudes, subjective norms, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use,
and related variables. In a longitudinal study of 107 users, intentions to
use a specific system, measured after a one hour introduction to the system,
were correlated 0.35 with system use 14 weeks later. The intention usage
correlation was 0.63 at the end of this time period. Perceived usefulness
strongly influenced peoples' intentions, explaining more than half of the
variance in intentions at the end of 14 weeks. Perceived ease of use had a
small but significant effect on intentions as well, although this effect
subsided over time. Attitudes only partially mediated the effects of these
beliefs on intentions. Subjective norms had no effect on intentions. These
results suggest the possibility of simple but powerful models of the
determinants of user acceptance, with practical value for evaluating systems
and guiding managerial interventions aimed at reducing the problem of
underutilized computer technology.
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