學術產出-Proceedings

Article View/Open

Publication Export

Google ScholarTM

政大圖書館

Citation Infomation

  • No doi shows Citation Infomation
題名 The self-expressiveness of footprints: Understanding the drivers of check-in
作者 曾祥景
Hsieh, Sara
Tseng, Timmy H.
Lee, Crystal Tzu Ying
貢獻者 企管系
關鍵詞 Check-in; Peer influence; Place attachment; Public self-consciousness
日期 2014
上傳時間 16-Aug-2017 17:06:58 (UTC+8)
摘要 Drawing from the Dramaturgical theory (Goffman, 1959), present study contributes to propose a conceptual model that illuminate the underlying psychological mechanism which faciliate individual`s check-in behavior. Goffman (1959) posits that "impression management" impacts the self presentation of individuals, indicating that individuals adopt deliberate decisions to reveal particular aspects of the self. Past studies emphasize on the privacy issue that impacts location sharing (Barkhuus et al., 2008), while present study highlights that socially driven factors portrays a more comprehensive story that disclose the antecedenting drivers of check-in.This contributes in providing a framework to the previous sporadic studies concerning social motives in check-in literatures. Specifically, the findings support the view that individual`s public self-consciousness and peer influence, compelled by desirable self-presentation leads to involvment in check-in. This finding extends past researches in identifying two dimensions that drive check-in involvement. Furthermore, the results of this study confirm that driven by psychological proximity, a positive relationship is created between check-in involvement and place attachment, which in turn faciliates continual check-in behavioral intentions and the advocation of check-in.
關聯 Proceedings - Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems, PACIS 2014
18th Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems, PACIS 2014; Chengdu; China; 24 June 2014 到 28 June 2014; 代碼 111846
資料類型 conference
dc.contributor 企管系zh_Tw
dc.creator (作者) 曾祥景zh_TW
dc.creator (作者) Hsieh, Saraen_US
dc.creator (作者) Tseng, Timmy H.en_US
dc.creator (作者) Lee, Crystal Tzu Yingen_US
dc.date (日期) 2014en_US
dc.date.accessioned 16-Aug-2017 17:06:58 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 16-Aug-2017 17:06:58 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 16-Aug-2017 17:06:58 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/111993-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Drawing from the Dramaturgical theory (Goffman, 1959), present study contributes to propose a conceptual model that illuminate the underlying psychological mechanism which faciliate individual`s check-in behavior. Goffman (1959) posits that "impression management" impacts the self presentation of individuals, indicating that individuals adopt deliberate decisions to reveal particular aspects of the self. Past studies emphasize on the privacy issue that impacts location sharing (Barkhuus et al., 2008), while present study highlights that socially driven factors portrays a more comprehensive story that disclose the antecedenting drivers of check-in.This contributes in providing a framework to the previous sporadic studies concerning social motives in check-in literatures. Specifically, the findings support the view that individual`s public self-consciousness and peer influence, compelled by desirable self-presentation leads to involvment in check-in. This finding extends past researches in identifying two dimensions that drive check-in involvement. Furthermore, the results of this study confirm that driven by psychological proximity, a positive relationship is created between check-in involvement and place attachment, which in turn faciliates continual check-in behavioral intentions and the advocation of check-in.en_US
dc.format.extent 101 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype text/html-
dc.relation (關聯) Proceedings - Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems, PACIS 2014en_US
dc.relation (關聯) 18th Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems, PACIS 2014; Chengdu; China; 24 June 2014 到 28 June 2014; 代碼 111846zh_TW
dc.subject (關鍵詞) Check-in; Peer influence; Place attachment; Public self-consciousnessen_US
dc.title (題名) The self-expressiveness of footprints: Understanding the drivers of check-inen_US
dc.type (資料類型) conference