Playfulness and computers at work
Playfulness and computers at work
The experience of flow in computer-mediated and in face-to-face groups
ICIS '91 Proceedings of the twelfth international conference on Information systems
Exploring the factors associated with Web site success in the context of electronic commerce
Information and Management
Extending the TAM for a World-Wide-Web context
Information and Management
Determinants of the intention to use Internet/WWW at work: a confirmatory study
Information and Management
Why do people use information technology?: a critical review of the technology acceptance model
Information and Management
A motivational model of microcomputer usage
Journal of Management Information Systems
Towards an understanding of the behavioural intention to use a web site
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
Understanding e-learning continuance intention: An extension of the Technology Acceptance Model
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
The role of pleasure in web site success
Information and Management
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Human-computer interaction research in the managemant information systems discipline
The impact of Web quality and playfulness on user acceptance of online retailing
Information and Management
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
A temporal approach to expectations and desires from knowledge management systems
Decision Support Systems
International Journal of Mobile Communications
Explaining IS continuance in environments where usage is mandatory
Computers in Human Behavior
Information and Management
Exploring continued online service usage behavior: The roles of self-image congruity and regret
Computers in Human Behavior
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Modeling Web Site Design Across Cultures: Relationships to Trust, Satisfaction, and E-Loyalty
Journal of Management Information Systems
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
The role of task-technology fit as users' motivation to continue information system use
Computers in Human Behavior
International Journal of Mobile Learning and Organisation
Can affective factors contribute to explain continuance intention of web-based services?
Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Electronic Commerce
Learners' acceptance of e-learning in South Korea: Theories and results
Computers & Education
Colour appeal in website design within and across cultures: A multi-method evaluation
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications
How students estimate the effects of ICT and programming courses
Proceeding of the 44th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education
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This paper investigated the value of including "playfulness" in expectation-confirmation theory (ECT) when studying continued use of a web site. Original models examined cognitive beliefs and effects that influence a person's intention to continue to use an information system. Here, an extended ECT model (with an additional relationship between perceived playfulness and satisfaction) was shown to provide a better fit than a simple path from perceived usefulness to satisfaction. The results indicated that perceived playfulness, confirmation to satisfaction, and perceived usefulness all contributed significantly to the users' intent to reuse a web site. Thus, we believe that the extended ECT model is an appropriate tool for the study of web site effects.