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TopIntroduction
As wireless-enabled devices become easily accessible to users, wireless researchers are searching for ways to understand users and their usage. Papers published in the field of wireless networks have pointed to this research direction by examining maintenance issues involved in managing campus wide wireless networks (Bennington & Bartel, 1997), user mobility in a metropolitan area network (Tang & Baker, 1999), user behavior affecting network performance in a public wireless local area network (Balachandran, Voelker, Bahl, & Rangan, 2002). With such widespread proliferation, Wi-Fi technologies are at the forefront of wireless network research and will continue to supplement traditional wired local area networks for flexibility, convenience, and mobility.
One of the fastest growing wireless implementers is among university campuses (Kotz & Essien, 2002). Steen (2001) discovered in a survey that the use of laptops and mobile devices has increased among students, owing to easily available campus-wide wireless networks. As Wi-Fi technology gains acceptance from the majority of college students, observing users’ behaviors provided an opportunity to extend the scope of wireless research into social cognitive perspective. Applying Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory (1986), the objective of this study is to understand how the technological aspects of wireless networks affect users’ emotional reactions which lead to wireless usage. Although earlier research (Compeau & Higgins, 1995b; Compeau, Higgins & Huff, 1999) has applied this psychological model to study how students’ knowledge about a computer technology affects their performance, students’ emotional reactions (i.e., anxiety and affect) while using wireless networks have not been fully examined. By focusing on Wi-Fi usage among college students, we can identify the emotional reactions of the students while using wireless network and the effect of these emotional responses on their usage.
This study anticipates being helpful to the wireless network training designers by helping them determine how students react while using wireless networks. Hence, this paper seeks to answer two questions:
- 1.
Does the users' knowledge about wireless networks have an effect on their emotional responses while using wireless networks?
- 2.
Do the users’ emotional responses while using wireless networks have an effect on their wireless network usage?
To address the research questions, an empirical study involving qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection was conducted. The statistical software package SPSS 16.0 was used to analyze the data collected from the users.
TopTheoretical Background
Social cognitive theory (SCT) integrates an individual’s cognitive responses, behaviors, and environment to explain a specific behavioral outcome (Bandura, 1977). Bandura (1986) addresses the principle of triadic reciprocality in which person, environment and behaviors assert an integrated, predictive role in determining the behavioral outcome. In other words, SCT articulates that an individual gets influenced by the environment while monitoring a certain behavior and develops perceptions of their ability to perform that behavior.