Decision Sciences Journal 32(4) Index


Decision Sciences Journal
Volume 32, Number 4
Fall 2001

Information Technology Acceptance by Individual Professionals: A Model Comparison Approach

Patrick Y. K. Chau
School of Business, Faculty of Business and Economics, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, e-mail: pchau@business.hku.hk

Paul Jen-Hwa Hu
Accounting and Information Systems, David Eccles School of Business, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112, e-mail: actph@business.utah.edu

Abstract. The proliferation of innovative and exciting information technology applications that target individual “professionals” has made the examination or re-examination of existing technology acceptance theories and models in a “professional” setting increasingly important. The current research represents a conceptual replication of several previous model comparison studies. The particular models under investigation are the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), and a decomposed TPB model, potentially adequate in the targeted healthcare professional setting. These models are empirically examined and compared, using the responses to a survey on telemedicine technology acceptance collected from more than 400 physicians practicing in public tertiary hospitals in Hong Kong. Results of the study highlight several plausible limitations of TAM and TPB in explaining or predicting technology acceptance by individual professionals. In addition, findings from the study also suggest that instruments that have been developed and repeatedly tested in previous studies involving end users and business managers in ordinary business settings may not be equally valid in a professional setting. Several implications for technology acceptance/adoption research and technology management practices are discussed.

Subject Areas: Information Technology Acceptance, LISREL, Professional Users, Structural Equation Models, and Technology Adoption and Management.

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