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1 – 1 of 1Tao Chen, Tiancheng Shang, Rongxiao Yan and Kang He
The study explores how mobile governance affects the administrative burden on older adults, focusing on learning, psychological and compliance costs.
Abstract
Purpose
The study explores how mobile governance affects the administrative burden on older adults, focusing on learning, psychological and compliance costs.
Design/methodology/approach
Using attribution theory, the research employs a quantitative research design, utilizing surveys to gather data from 516 older adults across three cities in China: Quzhou, Wuhan and Shanghai. The study examines how intrinsic factors and extrinsic factors of m-government interfaces impact older adults’ administrative burden.
Findings
Perceived complexity increases learning, psychological and compliance costs for older adults. Personalization and high-quality information decrease these costs, enhancing user satisfaction. Visual appeal decreases anxiety and psychological costs.
Originality/value
This research links attribution theory with m-government’s administrative burden on older adults, offering new insights into optimizing m-government to serve older adults better.
Details