48,090 research outputs found

    PENGARUH MOBILE APP FEATURES DI SURABAYA TERHADAP POST-ADOPTION BEHAVIOUR

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    Abstract - The purpose of this study is to investigate the perception of Mobile App users to thecharacteristics of Mobile App (Mobile App Features) at Surabaya and its impact to Mobile AppUsefulness, Playful Engangement, Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth. This studyanalyzed using Structural Equation Model via the Statistical Package for Social Science computerprogram version 18 and Lisrel 8.70. 180 respondent were drawn from Mobile App users domiciled inSurabaya area. Result of this Study found Mobile App Usefulness have positive and significant impacton Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth, while Playful Engangement only havepositive and significant impact on Mobile App Stickiness

    PENGARUH MOBILE APP FEATURES DI SURABAYA TERHADAP POST-ADOPTION BEHAVIOUR

    Get PDF
    Abstract - The purpose of this study is to investigate the perception of Mobile App users to thecharacteristics of Mobile App (Mobile App Features) at Surabaya and its impact to Mobile AppUsefulness, Playful Engangement, Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth. This studyanalyzed using Structural Equation Model via the Statistical Package for Social Science computerprogram version 18 and Lisrel 8.70. 180 respondent were drawn from Mobile App users domiciled inSurabaya area. Result of this Study found Mobile App Usefulness have positive and significant impacton Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth, while Playful Engangement only havepositive and significant impact on Mobile App Stickiness

    PENGARUH MOBILE APP FEATURES DI SURABAYA TERHADAP POST-ADOPTION BEHAVIOUR

    Get PDF
    Abstract - The purpose of this study is to investigate the perception of Mobile App users to thecharacteristics of Mobile App (Mobile App Features) at Surabaya and its impact to Mobile AppUsefulness, Playful Engangement, Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth. This studyanalyzed using Structural Equation Model via the Statistical Package for Social Science computerprogram version 18 and Lisrel 8.70. 180 respondent were drawn from Mobile App users domiciled inSurabaya area. Result of this Study found Mobile App Usefulness have positive and significant impacton Mobile App Stickiness, and Mobile App Word of Mouth, while Playful Engangement only havepositive and significant impact on Mobile App Stickiness

    Using the Turnitin mobile app

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    Using the Turnitin mobile app. with iPad

    VCU CCTR Mobile App: Android & iOS

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    In today’s day and age, data should be accessible at all times. The biggest break-through for data accessibility is mobile technologies such as phones and tablets. The CCTR provides a continuum of informatics research and services to support translational and clinical research. Clinical Trials represent one of the central themes for the Center for Clinical and Translational Research, but they do not have a mobile app for the VCU community to access CCTR’s informatics resources. This project aims to promote the expanded informatics research and services available to VCU students, faculty and staff as well as patients interested in discovering more about clinical research at VCU. The CCTR wants to extend current research data management systems and traditional webpages to mobile technologies. This will enable the CCTR to provide the CCTR user community with seamless access to its current and developing infomratics resources. The project followed the agile development methodology. Each week, we created new features for the mobile app, slowly adding onto the initial app we created. The major goal of the project was to be able to pull data from the Forte API. Extra features were added on later on for the overall user-friendliness. The app primarily focused on function over form. In the end, we tried to stick with VCU colors. Over the course of the project, we encountered a few issues along the way. None of us have had experience programming for the android OS. We were familiar with java, but the android library had many more requirements to get everything working. We needed to learn to program for the android OS and also learn new technology associated with mobile app programming. Another issue we came across was scalability, getting the app to comply with VCU branding seemed simple at first, but when we started adding in logos, we encountered a lot of errors. The logos had to be refactored to fit 100% with the application. The CCTR now has a fully functional Clinical Trials Android Application. Over the course of the final semester, additional features will be prioritized based on complexity, and importance to the CCTR and included in the mobile apps. Features that impact the access of information and benefits the CCTR will be added as the project progresses. The final goal will be to create both an Android and an iOS app. Before the apps can be officially finished, a live instance of data will be needed that utilizes VCU resources for accessing data about VCU’s clinical trials.https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/capstone/1020/thumbnail.jp

    Going Rogue: Mobile Research Applications and the Right to Privacy

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    This Article investigates whether nonsectoral state laws may serve as a viable source of privacy and security standards for mobile health research participants and other health data subjects until new federal laws are created or enforced. In particular, this Article (1) catalogues and analyzes the nonsectoral data privacy, security, and breach notification statutes of all fifty states and the District of Columbia; (2) applies these statutes to mobile-app-mediated health research conducted by independent scientists, citizen scientists, and patient researchers; and (3) proposes substantive amendments to state law that could help protect the privacy and security of all health data subjects, including mobile-app-mediated health research participants

    Mobile apps usage and dynamic capabilities: A structural equation model of SMEs in Lagos, Nigeria.

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.Significant knowledge exists regarding the application of dynamic capability (DC) frameworks in large firms, but their impact on smaller organisations is yet to be fully researched. This study surveyed 1162 small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in Lagos in an effort to understand how SMEs in developing country contexts use mobile apps to enhance their businesses through DCs. Through the use of the covariance-based structural equation modelling (SEM) technique, the study explored the fitness of a conceptual formative model for SMEs. The model assembled 7 latent variables namely: mobile app usage, adaptive capability, absorptive capability, innovative capability, opportunity sensing ability, opportunity shaping ability and opportunity seizing ability. Subsequently, 15 hypotheses aimed at testing the relationships between the latent variables were developed and tested. The findings revealed that mobile app usage increases the adaptive, absorptive and innovative capabilities of SMEs. Absorptive capabilities help SMEs to maximise opportunities, while innovative capabilities negatively influence SMEs’ tendency to maximise opportunities. The results failed to establish a direct relationship between mobile app usage and SMEs’ ability to maximise opportunities. The research outcomes indicate that SMEs in Lagos respond to opportunities innovatively but they seldom exhibit innovation in order to create opportunities. The heterogeneous nature of SMEs complicates any clear-cut narrative as to how SMEs in Lagos should employ mobile apps to create and maximise opportunities. However, mobile apps could induce innovation and, as such, impact significantly when developed and applied to the contextual requirements of SMEs. The research revealed the untapped potential of SMEs’ mobile app usage in Lagos

    Implementing Ethics for a Mobile App Deployment

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    This paper discusses the ethical dimensions of a research project in which we deployed a personal tracking app on the Apple App Store and collected data from users with whom we had little or no direct contact. We describe the in-app functionality we created for supporting consent and withdrawal, our approach to privacy, our navigation of a formal ethical review, and navigation of the Apple approval process. We highlight two key issues for deployment-based research. Firstly, that it involves addressing multiple, sometimes conflicting ethical principles and guidelines. Secondly, that research ethics are not readily separable from design, but the two are enmeshed. As such, we argue that in-action and situational perspectives on research ethics are relevant to deployment-based research, even where the technology is relatively mundane. We also argue that it is desirable to produce and share relevant design knowledge and embed in-action and situational approaches in design activities
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