Print Email Facebook Twitter How do personality traits influence Open Government Data (OGD) adoption and usage? Investigating the indirect and moderating effects Title How do personality traits influence Open Government Data (OGD) adoption and usage? Investigating the indirect and moderating effects Author Rizun, Nina (Gdansk University of Technology) Alexopoulos, Charalampos (University of the Aegean) Saxena, Stuti (Graphic Era University, Dehradun) Kleiman, F. (TU Delft Information and Communication Technology) Matheus, R. (TU Delft Information and Communication Technology) Contributor Cid, David Duenas (editor) Date 2023 Abstract Open Government Data (OGD) research has focused for a long on the adoption and usage from the perspectives of users across different contexts. The underlying rationale for this specific focus is that OGD initiatives are undertaken to further citizen engagement with OGD for value generation and innovation purposes. Conceding that usage propensity is different across individuals, it is important to understand the influence of personality traits vis-à-vis OGD adoption and usage. Given that OGD has been regarded as a sophisticated "technology"and the role of personality traits has been considered as important in the adoption and usage of "technologies"in general, therefore, the present study contributes to the extant OGD-focused literature from a novel dimension. The study invokes the adapted model of the Unified Theory of Technology Adoption and Use (UTAUT) alongside the HEXACO-100 inventory constructs for studying the relationships between the constructs with a sample of 530 respondents. The results demonstrate that higher user Openness to Experience contributes to their higher Effort and Performance Expectancy; exposure to Social Influence; an increased level of Trust; and a more positive perception of Facilitating Conditions and Information Quality. Agreeable people are more likely to voluntarily use OGD. An individual's conscientiousness improves their perception of factors related to OGD quality. Excessive emotionality leads to a more critical perception of systems and information quality issues. Our findings also attest to the moderating impact of Honesty-Humility across Information Quality-Behavioral Intention positively; Extraversion across Information Quality-Behavioral Intention negatively and Extraversion across Trust-Behavioral Intention positively. Honesty turns out to be important for considering Information Quality vis-à-vis OGD adoption and usage but whilst extroverts are concerned about Information Quality, i.e. flawless information retrieval via OGD sources, Introverts are concerned about OGD trustworthiness, i.e. credible OGD for its adoption and usage and Extroverts find the OGD reliable and credible. With pointers for further research across the personality traits-OGD adoption and usage theme, the study closes with practitioner implications. Subject HEXACOOGDOpen Government DataPersonality To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:d11cd978-6306-45c1-9474-d6babc95daa3 DOI https://doi.org/10.1145/3598469.3598521 Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) ISBN 979-8-4007-0837-4 Source Proceedings of the 24th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research - Together in the Unstable World: Digital Government and Solidarity, DGO 2023 Event 24th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research - Together in the Unstable World: Digital Government and Solidarity, DGO 2023, 2023-07-11 → 2023-07-14, Gdansk, Poland Series ACM International Conference Proceeding Series Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights © 2023 Nina Rizun, Charalampos Alexopoulos, Stuti Saxena, F. Kleiman, R. Matheus Files PDF 3598469.3598521.pdf 726.64 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:d11cd978-6306-45c1-9474-d6babc95daa3/datastream/OBJ/view