Authors
Brent A Zenobia, Charles M Weber
Publication date
2011/12
Journal
International Journal of Innovation and Technology Management
Volume
8
Issue
04
Pages
535-555
Publisher
World Scientific Publishing Company
Description
A qualitative empirical study explores the psychological process by which transportation consumers adopt alternatives to single occupancy vehicles. The study's findings give rise to the Motive-Technology-Belief (MTB) framework, a theory that conceives of technology adoption in terms of three mental structures: motives are inner mental reasons; technologies are tools that pertain to motives; and beliefs are associations between motives and/or technologies. Their behavioral interactions are governed by three conscious processes: selecting is the process of choosing a tool in response to an immediate need; evaluating is the process of forming beliefs about tools; and maintaining is the process of determining the functional status of tools. They are augmented by five unconscious auxiliary processes: perceiving, focusing, framing, consolidating, and acting.
The primary contribution of this paper is the first coherent …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BA Zenobia, CM Weber - International Journal of Innovation and Technology …, 2011