Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments - Premier issue
Musings on telepresence and virtual presence
Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments - Premier issue
Intelligent behaviour in animals and robots
Intelligent behaviour in animals and robots
Defining virtual reality: dimensions determining telepresence
Communication in the age of virtual reality
Extending the TAM for a World-Wide-Web context
Information and Management
Telepresence — the future of telephony
BT Technology Journal
Working Knowledge: How Organizations Manage What They Know
Working Knowledge: How Organizations Manage What They Know
Information Systems Research
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model and Flow Theory to Online Consumer Behavior
Information Systems Research
The importance of trust and community in developing and maintaining a community electronic network
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: Trust and technology
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
A grounded theory of the flow experiences of web users
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Incorporating knowledge acquisition
Social influence process in the acceptance of a virtual community service
Information Systems Frontiers
Understanding e-learning continuance intention: An extension of the Technology Acceptance Model
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Examining the technology acceptance model using physician acceptance of telemedicine technology
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special section: Strategic and competitive information systems
Why we tag: motivations for annotation in mobile and online media
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The impact of Web quality and playfulness on user acceptance of online retailing
Information and Management
Web Acceptance Model (WAM): Moderating effects of user experience
Information and Management
Predictors of answer quality in online Q&A sites
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Weblogging: A study of social computing and its impact on organizations
Decision Support Systems
Virtual social interactions: Evolutionary, social psychological and technological perspectives
Computers in Human Behavior
Social network, social trust and shared goals in organizational knowledge sharing
Information and Management
Internet social network communities: Risk taking, trust, and privacy concerns
Computers in Human Behavior
Understanding the factors affecting online elderly user's participation in video UCC services
Computers in Human Behavior
Co-creation and user-generated content-elderly people's user requirements
Computers in Human Behavior
Internet portals' strategic utilization of UCC and Web 2.0 Ecology
Decision Support Systems
Computers in Human Behavior
An empirical study of the factors affecting social network service use
Computers in Human Behavior
Integrating perceived playfulness into expectation-confirmation model for web portal context
Information and Management
Acceptance of Internet-based learning medium: the role of extrinsic and intrinsic motivation
Information and Management
Hi-index | 12.05 |
Up to now UCC services have been dominating the majority of the internet traffic, yet the answers to what motivates people to participate in the UCC services still remain vague and unclear. It is the motivation to find these answers that lead to this study. We adopted technology acceptance model (TAM) to our model and examined the effects of external variables-social identity, telepresence, altruism, perceived playfulness and social trust. Data was collected from undergraduate students in Jeonju University, South Korea, who had experience in UCC. The findings showed that social trust and perceived playfulness play a pivotal role in explaining the individual's behavioral intention to participate in UCC services. Also, perceived encouragement was found to have significant influence on social trust instead of its direct effect on the intention to participate in UCC services. Additionally, social identity and telepresence were the most important factors of perceived encouragement. This implication can help both researchers and Web practitioners to better understand user behavior in UCC context.