Systems that support decision makers: description and analysis
Systems that support decision makers: description and analysis
Measuring system usage: implications for IS theory testing
Management Science
Communications of the ACM
Activity theory and human-computer interaction
Context and consciousness
Studying context: a comparison of activity theory, situated action models, and distributed cognition
Context and consciousness
Activity theory: implications for human-computer interaction
Context and consciousness
Assessing IT usage: the role of prior experience
MIS Quarterly
A feedback model to understand information system usage
Information and Management
An activity theory approach to affordance
Proceedings of the second Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction
Information Systems Research
Affective Quality and Cognitive Absorption: Extending Technology Acceptance Research
HICSS '06 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 08
A balanced thinking-feelings model of information systems continuance
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Research Note-Two Competing Perspectives on Automatic Use: A Theoretical and Empirical Comparison
Information Systems Research
Design science in information systems research
MIS Quarterly
Computers in Human Behavior
Antecedents of application service continuance: A synthesis of satisfaction and trust
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Contextual constraints in media choice: Beyond information richness
Decision Support Systems
Teenagers in social virtual worlds: Continuous use and purchasing behavior in Habbo Hotel
Computers in Human Behavior
User Acceptance of Agile Information Systems: A Model and Empirical Test
Journal of Management Information Systems
Motivating IS security compliance: Insights from Habit and Protection Motivation Theory
Information and Management
Computers in Human Behavior
Conceptualizing means-end chains of user goals as networks
Information and Management
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Factors encouraging the internet banking adoption in Thailand
International Journal of Electronic Finance
The temporal relationships among habit, intention and IS uses
Computers in Human Behavior
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One of the most welcome recent developments in Information Systems scholarship has been the growing interest in individuals' continuing use of information technology well after initial adoption, known in the literature as IT usage, IT continuance, and post-adoptive IT usage. In this essay, we explore the theoretical underpinnings of IS research on continuing IT use. Although the IS literature on continuing IT use emphasizes the role of habitual behavior that does not require conscious behavioral intention, it does so in a way that largely remains faithful to the theoretical tradition of planned behavior and reasoned action. However, a close reading of reference literatures on automatic behavior (behavior that is not consciously controlled) and the influences of emotion on behavior suggests that planned behavior and reasoned action may not provide the best theoretical foundation for the study of continuing IT use. As a result, we call for empirical research that directly compares and contrasts the consensus theory of continuing IT use with rival theories that place much greater emphasis on unplanned and unreasoned action.