A foundation for the study of group decision support systems
Management Science
The psychological origins of perceived usefulness and ease-of-use
Information and Management
Human Factors of Information Technology in the Office
Human Factors of Information Technology in the Office
Groups Interacting with Technology: Ideas, Evidence, Issues and an Agenda
Groups Interacting with Technology: Ideas, Evidence, Issues and an Agenda
Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution
Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution
Information Systems Research
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model and Flow Theory to Online Consumer Behavior
Information Systems Research
Discretionary adoption of group support software: lessons from calendar applications
Implementing collaboration technologies in industry
A Theoretical Integration of User Satisfaction and Technology Acceptance
Information Systems Research
Reconstructing the Stage: The Use of Instant Messaging to Restructure Meeting Boundaries
HICSS '06 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 01
An assessment of group support systems experimental research: methodology and results
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special issue: GSS insights: a look back at the lab, a look forward from the field
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Journal of Management Information Systems
Group Support Systems: A Descriptive Evaluation of Case and Field Studies
Journal of Management Information Systems
Investigating the Moderators of the Group Support Systems Use with Meta-Analysis
Journal of Management Information Systems
Research in Information Systems: An Empirical Study of Diversity in the Discipline and Its Journals
Journal of Management Information Systems
Journal of Management Information Systems
Information Systems Research
Information technology to support electronic meetings
MIS Quarterly
A usability-centred perspective on intention to use mobile payment
International Journal of Mobile Communications
Proceedings of the 50th annual conference on Computers and People Research
Revisiting Media Choice: A Behavioral Decision-Making Perspective
International Journal of e-Collaboration
A Conceptual Model for Examining E-Government Adoption in Jordan
International Journal of Electronic Government Research
A Preliminary Classification of Usage Measures in Information System Acceptance: A Q-Sort Approach
International Journal of Technology Diffusion
Journal of Management Information Systems
Improving e-learning motivation using social software
Proceedings of the 2013 annual conference on Computers and people research
International Journal of Business Information Systems
Course management system adoption and usage: A process theoretic perspective
Computers in Human Behavior
Breaching barriers to collaboration in public spaces
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction
Wiki: Produzindo um jornal de forma colaborativa
Proceedings of the X Brazilian Symposium in Collaborative Systems
The role of theory in gender and information systems research
Information and Organization
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The paper presents a model integrating theories from collaboration research (i.e., social presence theory, channel expansion theory, and the task closure model) with a recent theory from technology adoption research (i.e., unified theory of acceptance and use of technology, abbreviated to UTAUT) to explain the adoption and use of collaboration technology. We theorize that collaboration technology characteristics, individual and group characteristics, task characteristics, and situational characteristics are predictors of performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions in UTAUT. We further theorize that the UTAUT constructs, in concert with gender, age, and experience, predict intention to use a collaboration technology, which in turn predicts use. We conducted two field studies in Finland among (1) 349 short message service (SMS) users and (2) 447 employees who were potential users of a new collaboration technology in an organization. Our model was supported in both studies. The current work contributes to research by developing and testing a technology-specific model of adoption in the collaboration context.