Abstract
Collaborative and social media SaaS cloud services emerged as one promising technology to meet the demand of high connectivity, collaboration, and reliability, while achieving cost-effective solutions. However, scarcity of empirical works has been devoted to the higher education sector represented by the millennials at university campus. This work tries to fill this gap and proposes an integrated model of Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) to understand the dominant factors of the adoption of the collaborative and social media that are cloud-based services and applications. The purpose of the study is to formulate the conceptual model: A review of the literature.
Health Communication and Decision Making about Vaccine Clinical Trials during a Pandemic comminit.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from comminit.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Liping Li) .the importance of promoting the efficacy and norms of vaccination, and engaging people who are open to experience in the early diffusion process. Such health education effects can also take advantage of social media to promulgate the effects.
Some of the studies conducted to explain COVID-19 vaccination intention have drawn on behavioural theories, such as the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and the Health Belief Model (HBM). In light of the notion that COVID-19 vaccination is an innovative behaviour, the present study draws on Diffusion of Innovations (DOI) Theory to explain how this behaviour will be adopted in the early phase and gradually become diffused as a common practice. The DOI proposes 4 factors that would explain the uptake of innovative behaviour: (i) attributes of the innovation (perceived efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccine); (ii) communication channel (social media use for COVID-19-vaccine-related information); (iii) characteristics of the adopters (open
Study explains improved outcomes with gene-specific diets The Theory of Planned Behaviour provides an explanation as to why genetic-based lifestyle interventions create better behaviour change than population based interventions.
Behaviour change theories can help provide systematic explanations for why certain interventions promote changes in lifestyle habits. The Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) is one of the most widely accepted behavioural theories and suggests that a person s likelihood of carrying out a planned behaviour is influenced by: attitudes, about the likely consequences of a given behaviour; subjective norms, relating to beliefs about the expectations of others; and perceived behavioural control, relating to the perception of factors that may assist or impede certain behaviours.