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e-Voting intent: A comparison of young and elderly voters
Authors:Anne Powell  Clay K. Williams  Douglas B. Bock  Thomas Doellman  Jason Allen
Affiliation:Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Department of Computer Management and Information Systems, Campus Box 1106, Edwardsville, IL 62026, USA
Abstract:The ability to vote online has the potential to increase voter turnout for elections due to increased convenience over traditional voting polls. This study examines factors that can affect a citizen's intent to vote online. Survey subjects came from two different age groups: young adults, 18–25 years of age; and senior citizens, ages 60 plus. Using the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT), the study found that performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, trust in the internet, and computer anxiety were significantly related to intent to use online voting. Trust in the government was insignificant. Performance expectancy, social influence, and computer anxiety were related to intent to vote online for both young adults and seniors. Effort expectancy was related to intent to vote for the seniors but not young adults, and trust in the internet was related to intent to vote for young adults but not seniors.
Keywords:e-Voting   Online voting   UTAUT   Technology acceptance   Trust
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