A computational literature review of the technology acceptance model

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
A computational literature review of the technology acceptance model
Abstract
A literature review is a central part of any research project, allowing the existing research to be mapped and new research questions to be posited. However, due to the limitations of human data processing, the literature review can suffer from an inability to handle large volumes of research articles. The computational literature review (CLR) is proposed here as a complementary part of a wider literature review process. The CLR automates some of the analysis of research articles with analyses of impact (citations), structure (co-authorship networks) and content (topic modeling of abstracts). A contribution of the paper is to demonstrate how the content of abstracts can be analyzed automatically to provide a set of research topics within a literature corpus. The CLR software can be used to support three use cases: (1) analysis of the literature for a research area, (2) analysis and ranking of journals, and (3) analysis and ranking of individual scholars and research teams. The working of the CLR software is illustrated through application to the technology acceptance model (TAM) using a set of 3,386 articles. The CLR is an open source offering, developed in the statistical programming language R, and made freely available to researchers to use and develop further.
Publication
International Journal of Information Management
Volume
36
Issue
6, Part B
Pages
1248-1259
Date
2016-12-01
Journal Abbr
International Journal of Information Management
ISSN
0268-4012
Accessed
18/01/2024, 22:26
Library Catalogue
ScienceDirect
Citation
Mortenson, M. J., & Vidgen, R. (2016). A computational literature review of the technology acceptance model. International Journal of Information Management, 36(6, Part B), 1248–1259. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2016.07.007