International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
Determining information system usage: some issues and examples
Information and Management
Explaining the role of user participation in information system use
Management Science
Measuring system usage: implications for IS theory testing
Management Science
Understanding user evaluations of information systems
Management Science
Emerging trends in the WWW user population
Communications of the ACM
The effects of decision support and task contingencies on model formulation: a cognitive perspective
Decision Support Systems - Special issue: DSS on model formulation
Material matters: assessing the effectiveness of materials management IS
Information and Management
Navigation strategies with ecological displays
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Speech recognition for command entry in multimodal interaction
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Creating an effective training environment for enhancing telework
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
The technology acceptance model and the World Wide Web
Decision Support Systems
Optimizing search by showing results in context
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Why do people use information technology?: a critical review of the technology acceptance model
Information and Management
Evaluating the Impact of Dss, Cognitive Effort, and Incentives on Strategy Selection
Information Systems Research
On learning to predict web traffic
Decision Support Systems - Special issue: Web data mining
A person-artefact-task (PAT) model of flow antecedents in computer-mediated environments
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue on HCI and MIS
Flow experiences in information technology use
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Reconceptualizing System Usage: An Approach and Empirical Test
Information Systems Research
The DeLone and McLean Model of Information Systems Success: A Ten-Year Update
Journal of Management Information Systems
Information Systems Use: Construct conceptualization and scale development
Computers in Human Behavior
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The purposes of this study are to: (1) obtain measures of actual decision support system (DSS) use that include the three elements of DSS use proposed by Burton-Jones and Straub (Burton-Jones, A., & Straub, D.W., Jr., (2006). Reconceptualizing system usage: An approach and empirical test. Information Systems Research, 17(3), 228-246), and (2) identify an important psychological construct - a user's motivation to perform a task - and examine how it interacts with two DSS characteristics - effectiveness and efficiency - to affect actual DSS use. As predicted, the findings indicated that individuals who used a more effective DSS to work on a task that they were motivated in increased usage of the DSS, while DSS use did not differ between individuals who used either a more or less effective DSS to complete a task that they were less motivated in. The results also showed significant difference for two measures of DSS use (i.e., STEP and TIME) and no significant difference for one measure of DSS use (i.e., USE) between individuals who used either a more or less efficient DSS to perform a task that they were more motivated in. As expected, significant differences were found for individuals who used either a more or less efficient DSS to complete a task that they were less motivated in. Finally, the results showed that DSS use increased when perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of the DSS were high; therefore, these results corroborate the findings of prior research in the context of actual DSS use.