Extending the Technology Acceptance Model 3 to Incorporate the Phenomenon of Warm-Glow
Antonios Saravanos (1), Stavros Zervoudakis (1), and Dongnanzi Zheng, (1) ((1) New York University)

TL;DR
This study extends TAM3 by incorporating warm-glow constructs, revealing that both intrinsic and extrinsic warm-glow significantly influence user adoption decisions alongside traditional factors like perceived usefulness.
Contribution
The paper introduces TAM3 + WG, integrating warm-glow concepts into TAM3, and empirically demonstrates their impact on technology adoption.
Findings
Warm-glow constructs improve model fit over TAM3.
Perceived usefulness and warm-glow are key adoption factors.
Higher perceived extrinsic warm-glow increases perceived usefulness.
Abstract
In this paper, we extend the third evolution of the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM3) to incorporate warm-glow with the aim of understanding the role this phenomenon plays on user adoption decisions. Warm-glow is the feeling of satisfaction or pleasure (or both) that is experienced by individuals after they do something "good" for their fellow human. Two constructs - perceived extrinsic warm-glow (PEWG) and perceived intrinsic warm-glow (PIWG) - were incorporated into the TAM3 model to measure the two dimensions of user-experienced warm-glow, forming what we refer to as the TAM3 + WG model. An experimental approach was taken to evaluate the suitability of the proposed model (i.e., TAM3 + WG). A vignette was created to present users with a hypothetical technology designed to evoke warm-glow in participants. Our TAM3 + WG model was found to be superior in terms of fit to the TAM3 model.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Adoption and User Behaviour · Digital Marketing and Social Media · Consumer Retail Behavior Studies
