John Benamati
Miami University
49 Papers
257 Citations
John Benamati is an academic researcher from Miami University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Information technology management & Information technology. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 49 publications. Previous affiliations of John Benamati include University of Kentucky.
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Papers
Clarifying the Integration of Trust and TAM in E-Commerce Environments: Implications for Systems Design and Management
TL;DR: This research argues for the reinclusion and/or clarification of belief and attitude constructs relevant to technology acceptance and trust research streams, explains why these constructs are critical for understanding causality in such models, proposes an integration model that is consistent with this argument, and tests this model in a context exploring initial reactions to an e-vendor.
193
Seeing Is Believing: The Transitory Influence of Reputation Information on E‐Commerce Trust and Decision Making
TL;DR: Insight is provided into why reputation information may be more important in certain circumstances than in others and understanding of how consumer decision making is affected by different purchasing contexts is enhanced.
138
Trust and distrust in online banking: Their role in developing countries
John Benamati,Mark A. Serva +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of trust and distrust in online banking is examined and a framework for categorizing existing and potential online banking users based on their trustworthiness and distrust is presented.
127
Coping with rapid changes in IT
John Benamati,Albert L. Lederer +1 more
TL;DR: In general, the findings suggest that IT organizations do not cope very effectively with rapid IT change and suggest guidance on how these organizations might cope better.
97
Trustworthiness in B2C e-commerce: an examination of alternative models
TL;DR: The study suggests that trustworthiness is multidimensional and that both first- and second-order conceptualizations have a place in e-commerce trust research.
88