MISQ Archivist
How Habit Limits the Predictive Power of
Intention:
The Case of Information Systems Continuance
Moez Limayem, Sabine Gabriele Hirt,
and Christy M. K. Cheung
Abstract
Past research in the area of information systems acceptance has
primarily focused on initial adoption under the implicit assumption
that IS usage is mainly determined by intention. While plausible in
the case of initial IS adoption, this assumption may not be as
readily applicable to continued IS usage behavior since it ignores
that frequently performed behaviors tend to become habitual and thus
automatic over time.
This paper is a step forward in defining and incorporating the
"habit" construct into IS research. Specifically, the purpose of
this study is to explore the role of habit and its antecedents in
the context of continued IS usage.
Building on previous work in other disciplines, we define habit
in the context of IS usage as the extent to which people tend to
perform behaviors (use IS) automatically because of learning.
Using recent work on the continued usage of IS (IS continuance), we
have developed a model suggesting that continued IS usage is not
only a consequence of intention, but also of habit. In particular,
in our research model, we propose IS habit to moderate the influence
of intention such that its importance in determining behavior
decreases as the behavior in question takes on a more habitual
nature. Integrating past research on habit and IS continuance
further, we suggest how antecedents of behavior/behavioral intention
as identified by IS continuance research relate to drivers of
habitualization.
We empirically tested the model in the context of voluntary
continued WWW usage. Our results support the argument that habit
acts as a moderating variable of the relationship between intentions
and IS continuance behavior, which may put a boundary condition on
the explanatory power of intentions in the context of continued IS
usage. The data also support that satisfaction, frequency of past
behavior, and comprehensiveness of usage are key to habit formation
and thus relevant in the context of IS continuance behavior.
Implications of these findings are discussed and managerial
guidelines presented.