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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ARROW-13177?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Jonathan Keane deleted ARROW-13177:
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> Technology Acceptance juego friv Model
> --------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: ARROW-13177
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ARROW-13177
>             Project: Apache Arrow
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Abigail Cole
>            Priority: Major
>
> Advances in computing and information technology are changing the way people 
> meet and communicate. People can meet, talk, and work together outside 
> traditional meeting and office spaces. For instance, with the introduction of 
> software designed to help people schedule meetings and facilitate decision or 
> learning processes, is weakening geographical constraints and changing 
> interpersonal communication dynamics. Information technology is also 
> dramatically affecting the way people teach and learn.
> As new information technologies infiltrate workplaces, home, and classrooms, 
> research on user acceptance of new technologies has started to receive much 
> attention from professionals as well as academic researchers. Developers and 
> software industries are beginning to realize that lack of user acceptance of 
> technology can lead to loss of money and resources.
> In studying user acceptance and use of technology, the TAM is one of the most 
> cited models. The Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) was developed by Davis to 
> explain computer-usage behavior. The theoretical basis of the model was 
> Fishbein and Ajzen's Theory of Reasoned Action (TRA).
> The Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) is an information systems (System 
> consisting of the network of all communication channels used within an 
> organization) theory that models how users come to accept and use a 
> technology, The model suggests that when users are presented with a new 
> software package, a number of factors influence their decision about how and 
> when they will use it, notably:
> Perceived usefulness (PU) - This was defined by Fred Davis as "the degree to 
> which a person believes that using a particular system would enhance his or 
> her job performance".
> Perceived ease-of-use (PEOU) Davis defined this as "the degree to which a 
> person believes that using a particular system would be free from effort" 
> (Davis, 1989).
> The goal of TAM is "to provide an explanation of the determinants of computer 
> acceptance that is general, capable of explaining user behavior across a 
> broad range of end-user computing technologies and user populations, while at 
> the same time being both parsimonious and theoretically justified".
> According to the TAM, if a user perceives a specific technology as useful, 
> she/he will believe in a positive use-performance relationship. Since effort 
> is a finite resource, a user is likely to accept an application when she/he 
> perceives it as easier to use than another .As a consequence, educational 
> technology with a high level of PU and PEOU is more likely to induce positive 
> perceptions. The relation between PU and PEOU is that PU mediates the effect 
> of PEOU on attitude and intended use. In other words, while PU has direct 
> impacts on attitude and use, PEOU influences attitude and use indirectly 
> through PU.
> User acceptance is defined as "the demonstrable willingness within a user 
> group to employ information technology for the tasks it is designed to 
> support" (Dillon & Morris). Although this definition focuses on planned and 
> intended uses of technology, studies report that individual perceptions of 
> information technologies are likely to be influenced by the objective 
> characteristics of technology, as well as interaction with other users. For 
> example, the extent to which one evaluates new technology as useful, she/he 
> is likely to use it. At the same time, her/his perception of the system is 
> influenced by the way people around her/him evaluate and use the system.
> Studies on information technology continuously report that user attitudes are 
> important factors affecting the success of the system. For the past several 
> decades, many definitions of attitude have been proposed. However, all 
> theories consider attitude to be a relationship between a person and an 
> [*juego 
> friv*|https://complextime.com/friv-everything-you-need-to-know-about-it/] ** 
> object (Woelfel, 1995).
> In the context of information technologies, is an approach to the study of 
> attitude - the technology acceptance model (TAM). TAM suggests users 
> formulate a positive attitude toward the technology when they perceive the 
> technology to be useful and easy to use (Davis, 1989).
> A review of scholarly research on IS acceptance and usage suggests that TAM 
> has emerged as one of the most influential models in this stream of research 
> The TAM represents an important theoretical contribution toward understanding 
> IS usage and IS acceptance behaviors. However, this model -- with its 
> original emphasis on the design of system characteristics - does not account 
> for social influence in the adoption and utilization of new information 
> systems.
>  



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