Playfulness and computers at work
Playfulness and computers at work
Why do individuals use computer technology?: a Finnish case study
Information and Management
The technology acceptance model and the World Wide Web
Decision Support Systems
Extending the TAM for a World-Wide-Web context
Information and Management
Gender differences in perceptions of web-based shopping
Communications of the ACM - Evolving data mining into solutions for insights
Consumer trust in an Internet store
Information Technology and Management
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model and Flow Theory to Online Consumer Behavior
Information Systems Research
Developing and Validating Trust Measures for e-Commerce: An Integrative Typology
Information Systems Research
Factors influencing the usage of websites: the case of a generic portal in The Netherlands
Information and Management
Determinants of Successful Website Design: Relative Importance and Recommendations for Effectiveness
HICSS '99 Proceedings of the Thirty-second Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences-Volume 5 - Volume 5
Understanding online purchase intentions: contributions from technology and trust perspectives
European Journal of Information Systems
A motivational model of microcomputer usage
Journal of Management Information Systems
A meta-analysis of the technology acceptance model
Information and Management
Integrating perceived playfulness into expectation-confirmation model for web portal context
Information and Management
Trust and TAM in online shopping: an integrated model
MIS Quarterly
What makes consumers buy from Internet? A longitudinal study of online shopping
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans
International Journal of Business Information Systems
An empirical analysis of user evaluation factors on attitude and intention of using a search engine
International Journal of Business Information Systems
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This study proposes a model of e-shopping continuance intentions combining the revised technology acceptance model and expectation confirmation theory, measuring student gender differences with regard to continuance online shopping intentions in Saudi Arabia. The results of an online survey (n = 234, 61.5% women, 38.5% men) are used in a structural equation model that confirms fit. Perceived usefulness, enjoyment, and subjective norms are determinants of online shopping continuance in Saudi Arabia. The structural weights are largely equivalent, but the paths from subjective norms to enjoyment and subjective norms to continuance intention (men) and perceived usefulness to continuous intention (women) are not supported. The main contribution is to move beyond intentions to continuance. The model explains 71% of the intention to continue shopping online. The results suggest that online strategies cannot ignore gender differences on continuance intentions. The model can be generalised across the main commercial regions of Saudi Arabia.