The effects of cognitive dissonance and self-efficacy on short video discontinuous usage intention




Chen Ting, Li Xia, Duan Yaoqing

PublisherEmerald

2023

Information Technology and People

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE

INFORM TECHNOL PEOPL

26

0959-3845

1758-5813

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-08-2022-0634

https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-08-2022-0634



Purpose

The discontinuous usage behavior of short video social media presents an ongoing challenge to platform development. The purpose of this study is to investigate the antecedents of intentions to short media discontinuous usage.

Design/methodology/approach

This study adopts a Cognition-Affection-Conation (CAC) framework to analyze short video social media discontinuous intention on the basis of cognitive dissonance theory (CDT) and self-efficacy theory. The empirical evaluation of the research model was conducted using SmartPLS 2.0 and was based on questionnaire data obtained from participants in China.

Findings

The results show information overload and user addiction have a significant positive association with cognitive dissonance, which is, in turn, found to significantly impact discontinuous usage intention. Self-efficacy moderates the relationships between information overload, user addiction, cognitive dissonance and discontinuous usage.

Originality/value

This study contributes to the understanding of the factors that influence short video discontinuous usage intention and it achieves this by engaging from a CDT perspective and by applying Self-Efficacy Theory. Theoretical implications for future short video platform research, as well as practical suggestions for short video platform operators and users, are also discussed.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:20