International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
Information systems success measurement
Cultivating Communities of Practice: A Guide to Managing Knowledge
Cultivating Communities of Practice: A Guide to Managing Knowledge
Context of use within usability activities
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
HICSS '02 Proceedings of the 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'02)-Volume 1 - Volume 1
Information Systems Success Revisited
HICSS '02 Proceedings of the 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'02)-Volume 8 - Volume 8
TCBWorks: A First Generation Web-Groupware System
HICSS '97 Proceedings of the 30th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences: Information Systems Track-Collaboration Systems and Technology - Volume 2
A Theoretical Integration of User Satisfaction and Technology Acceptance
Information Systems Research
A meta-analysis of the technology acceptance model
Information and Management
An Empirical Study of Web-Based Knowledge Community Success
HICSS '07 Proceedings of the 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
Adoption of Mobile Commerce Services by Individuals: A Meta-Analysis of the
ICMB '07 Proceedings of the International Conference on the Management of Mobile Business
Designing usable interfaces with cultural dimensions
INTERACT'05 Proceedings of the 2005 IFIP TC13 international conference on Human-Computer Interaction
Identifying the value types of virtual communities based on the Q method
International Journal of Web Based Communities
What makes consumers use VoIP over mobile phones? Free riding or consumerization of new service
Telecommunications Policy
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In this paper, the acceptance and use of mobile phone-mediated communication technologies are studied in three different cultural student communities. The analysis is based on the Mobile Information System Adoption and Use (MISAU) model developed here. The model combines elements of the technology acceptance and information success models into a single framework. The results of the study indicate similar acceptance patterns in all three subcommunities, but social network analysis reveals interesting cultural differences in how mobile communication technology is used. When the results are analysed with Hofstede's dimensions of a national culture (Hofstede, 2001), power distance, individualism and masculinity have a strong correlation with the communication intensity of the subcommunity.