ASIA unversity:Item 310904400/115325
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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://asiair.asia.edu.tw/ir/handle/310904400/115325


    Title: The Acceptance and Use of Smartphones among Older Adults: Differences in UTAUT Determinants before and after Training
    Authors: 楊鎮嘉;Chia, Yang Cheng;Cheng, Liu;Cheng, Liu;shun, Wang Yi;shun, Wang Yi
    Contributors: 醫學暨健康學院健康產業管理學系
    Date: 2022-NA
    Issue Date: 2023-03-29 01:29:12 (UTC+0)
    Publisher: 亞洲大學
    Abstract: Purpose
    This article aims at a Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model framework that was used to investigate the impact of a 16-h smartphone training program on the correlations among different constructs of smartphone use in a sample of older adults.

    Design/methodology/approach
    A total of 208 participants aged 60–78 (mean: 65.4) years completed a questionnaire that collected information on demographic variables and the frequency and duration of smartphone use as well as the answers to questions on the six UTAUT constructs of performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, facilitating conditions, and behavioral intention and usage behavior. The data were analyzed using partial least squares analysis.

    Findings
    This study was the first to compare post-training changes in the correlations among UTAUT constructs. The results revealed significant post-training changes in all construct correlations. Behavioral intention and facilitating conditions were shown to significantly impact usage behavior both before and after training and performance expectancy was shown to impact behavioral intention before training. After training, both effort expectancy and social influence were found to impact behavioral intention significantly. Moreover, the impact of facilitating conditions on usage behavior was significantly increased after training.

    Originality/value
    To date, no study published in the literature has investigated the impact of technological training on the technology-use intentions and behaviors of older adults. The findings of this study suggest that, for older adults, the results of the acceptance and use model for smartphones change significantly and positively between pre-smartphone training and post-smartphone training time points. The findings support that technology training has a positive impact on smartphone use in older adults
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Healthcare Administration] Journal Article

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