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Reconceptualizing Compatibility
Beliefs
in Technology Acceptance Research
Elena Karahanna, Ritu
Agarwal, and Corey Angst
Abstract
Theoretical and
empirical research in technology acceptance, while acknowledging the
importance of individual beliefs about the compatibility of a
technology, has produced equivocal results. This study focuses on
further conceptual development of this important belief in technology
acceptance. Unlike much prior research that has focused on only a
limited aspect of compatibility, we provide a more comprehensive
conceptual definition that disaggregates the content of compatibility
into four distinct and separable constructs: compatibility with
preferred work style, compatibility with existing work practices,
compatibility with prior experience, and compatibility with
values. We suggest that the form of the multidimensional
compatibility construct is best modeled as a multivariate structural
model. Based on their conceptual definitions, we develop
operational measures for the four compatibility variables. We
assess the nomological validity of our conceptualization by situating
it within the technology acceptance model. In contrast to prior
research, which has regarded beliefs of compatibility as an independent
antecedent of technology acceptance outcomes, we posit causal linkages
not only among the four compatibility beliefs, but also between
compatibility beliefs and usefulness, and ease of use. We test
our theoretical model with a field sample of 278 users of a customer
relationship management system in the context of a large bank.
Scale validation indicates that the operational measures of
compatibility developed in this study have acceptable psychometric
properties, which support the existence of four distinct
constructs. Results largely support the theorized
relationships.
Keywords:
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