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E-learning continuance: The impact of interactivity and the mediating role of imagery, presence and flow

•A comprehensive model of the direct and indirect effects of interactivity is proposed and validated.•Interactivity influences the e-learners’ responses through the intervening effects of imagery, spatial and copresence, and flow.•Imagery processes influence spatial and copresence feelings, and flow...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Information & management 2016-06, Vol.53 (4), p.504-516
Main Authors: Rodríguez Ardura, Inma, Meseguer Artola, Antoni
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•A comprehensive model of the direct and indirect effects of interactivity is proposed and validated.•Interactivity influences the e-learners’ responses through the intervening effects of imagery, spatial and copresence, and flow.•Imagery processes influence spatial and copresence feelings, and flow.•Behavioural intention is determined by both attitude and copresence, and prompts actual e-learning continuance. This paper empirically examines the impact of the interactivity elicited by e-learning environments for higher education. By considering the underlying processes of imagery, spatial presence, copresence and flow, we analyse how interactivity affects users’ responses towards the learning environment, including their actual continuance behaviour. We validate our conceptual model by using survey and registrar data obtained from 2530 students of an open, distance university in the European Higher Education Area. The results suggest that the interactivity elicited by an e-learning environment unleashes imagery that in turn facilitates spatial presence and copresence as well as flow. Significant paths are also found from interactivity to flow and from flow to e-learner response variables (attitude, intention to continue and actual continuance behaviour). The paper provides a novel account of the presence and flow-enabling mechanisms in e-learning and offers novel knowledge on how higher education institutions can facilitate e-learners’ continuance behaviour.
ISSN:0378-7206
1872-7530
DOI:10.1016/j.im.2015.11.005