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User Acceptance of Information
Technology: Toward
a Unified View
Viswanath Venkatesh, Michael G. Morris, Gordon
B. Davis, and
Fred D. Davis
Volume 27, Number 3
Abstract
Information technology (IT) acceptance research has
yielded many competing
models, each with different sets of acceptance determinants. In
this
paper, we (1) review user acceptance literature and discuss eight
prominent
models, (2) empirically compare the eight models and their extensions,
(3) formulate a unified theory that integrates elements across the
eight
models, and (4) empirically validate the unified model. The eight
models reviewed are the theory of reasoned action, the technology
acceptance
model, a motivational model, the theory of planned behavior, a model
combining
the technology acceptance model and the theory of planned behavior, a
model
of PC utilization, innovation diffusion theory, and social cognitive
theory.
Using data from four organizations over a six-month period with three
points
of measurement, the eight models explained between 17 percent and 53
percent
of the variance in user intentions to use information technology.
Next, a unified theory, called the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use
of Technology (UTAUT), was formulated, with four core determinants of
intention
and usage, and up to four moderators of key relationships. UTAUT
was then tested using the original data and found to outperform the
eight
individual models (69% adjusted-R2). UTAUT was then
confirmed
with data from two new organizations with similar results (70%
adjusted-R2).
UTAUT thus provides a useful tool for managers needing to assess the
likelihood
of success for new technology introductions and helps them understand
the
drivers of acceptance in order to proactively design interventions
(including
training, marketing, etc.) targeted at populations of users that may be
less inclined to adopt and use new systems. The paper also makes
several recommendations for future research including developing a
deeper
understanding of the dynamic influences studied here, refining
measurement
of the core constructs used in UTAUT, and understanding the
organizational
outcomes associated with new technology use.
Keywords:
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