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Can Gamification Concepts Work With E-Government?

Can Gamification Concepts Work With E-Government?

Emad Ahmed Abu-Shanab, Malak Rasheed Al-Sayed
Copyright: © 2019 |Volume: 12 |Issue: 3 |Pages: 16
ISSN: 1938-7857|EISSN: 1938-7865|EISBN13: 9781522564768|DOI: 10.4018/JITR.2019070103
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MLA

Abu-Shanab, Emad Ahmed, and Malak Rasheed Al-Sayed. "Can Gamification Concepts Work With E-Government?." JITR vol.12, no.3 2019: pp.44-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/JITR.2019070103

APA

Abu-Shanab, E. A. & Al-Sayed, M. R. (2019). Can Gamification Concepts Work With E-Government?. Journal of Information Technology Research (JITR), 12(3), 44-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/JITR.2019070103

Chicago

Abu-Shanab, Emad Ahmed, and Malak Rasheed Al-Sayed. "Can Gamification Concepts Work With E-Government?," Journal of Information Technology Research (JITR) 12, no.3: 44-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/JITR.2019070103

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Abstract

This article predicts the adoption of e-government websites and services by focusing on gamification and enjoyment factors. The sample uses ranked use of points and coupons as the most suitable schemes, while excluding the use of quests and puzzles. In predicting the intention to use e-government, five constructs were used: perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, enjoyment and innovation, positive influence on government image and negative influence of government images. Results indicated a significant role for enjoyment and innovation based on the gamification context. The influence on government image (positive and negative) were not significant in predicting the intention to use e-government. The coefficient of determination of the regression model was 0.655, which explains 65.5% of the variance in ITU.

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