The Extent to which the Physical Principles of Light Propagation in Optical Fibers Influence the Perceived Reliability and Infrastructural Integration of High-Speed Internet Services in Semi-Urban Regions of India?

Khokha, Aryann (2025) The Extent to which the Physical Principles of Light Propagation in Optical Fibers Influence the Perceived Reliability and Infrastructural Integration of High-Speed Internet Services in Semi-Urban Regions of India? World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 27 (1). pp. 1973-1997. ISSN 2581-9615

Abstract

Background: The rapid global proliferation of high-speed internet services hinges on the deployment of optical fiber cabels, especially in regions with higher digital demands. Optical fibers, utilizing fundamental physical principles such as total internal reflection, controlled modal dispersion, and minimal signal attenuation, have overtaken outdated technologies, such as copper wires, due to their unrivaled capacity, bandwidth, and immunity to electromagnetic interference. Despite quick adoption in urban regions; developing nations like India exhibit a distinct digital divide, with semi-urban populations often underserved. Prevailing technical literature broadly documents the advantages and operational physics of fiber optic systems, yet direct empirical connections between these physics-based strengths and user-perceived reliability (especially in semi-urban contexts) remain scarce, with present gaps. Further, the influence of demographic variables on reliability perceptions within such settings is inadequately explored, hence hindering whether infrastructural development translates into user trust and satisfaction. Methods: This quantitative study systematically investigated the extent to which the optical physics of fiber affect the perceived reliability and infrastructural integration of high-speed internet services across semi-urban regions of India. Convenience sampling yielded 3,701 valid respondents (from 3,852 initial participants; a 96.08% retention) who possessed direct experience with optical fiber internet and met rigorous exclusion criteria ensuring adequate exposure, technical awareness, and demographic relevance. The research incorporated four validated psychometric instruments: Davis’s Perceived Usefulness Scale, Khan’s Network Quality Perception Scale, the SERVQUAL Reliability dimension, and the E-S-QUAL System Availability instrument. Each instrument demonstrated high reliability (α > 0.80). The study employed independent samples t-tests and correlation analyses to evaluate differences and relationships across gender- and age-based cohorts, controlling for demographic and technical variables. Data distributions were confirmed normal via Quantile-Quantile (Q-Q) plots, validating the use of parametric statistical tests. Results: The empirical findings revealed highly consistent perception patterns across all demographic subgroups. Gender and age-based differences in perceived usefulness, network quality perception, and system availability were statistically non-significant, each demonstrating negligible effect sizes (Cohen's d < 0.10, p > 0.20). Only perceived reliability showed a statistically significant but practically negligible gender difference (p = 0.005, d = 0.09), with male respondents scoring minimally higher. Correlational analyses indicated a near-total independence among perceived usefulness, system availability, and technical quality assessments. The most striking result was a strong, negative correlation between network quality perception and perceived reliability (r = -0.66, p < 0.001), suggesting that heightened awareness of technical excellence may foster more critical attitudes toward reliability, accounting for 44% of the variance observed. No significant correlations were observed between either system availability or perceived usefulness and reliability, contradicting expectations from physics-based performance theory. Conclusions: The study presents robust evidence that the core physical principles of optical fiber operation provide uniformly positive user experiences in semi-urban India, independent of demographic variations. The practical implication is that optical fiber’s inherent qualities create stable, high-quality internet experiences universally. Paradoxically, increased user awareness of these technical strengths can heighten reliability expectations, often leading to stricter scrutiny of service dependability. For infrastructure stakeholders, these insights recommend prioritizing physics-centric deployment and performance consistency over demographic tailoring. The research advances understanding in the intersection between physical infrastructure and human perception, while highlighting a need for continued study on expectation management and physics-specific user awareness in diverse markets. The study’s cross-sectional design and convenience sampling limit wider generalizability, yet its methodological rigor offers a strong foundation for future longitudinal and cross-context investigations.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.1.2730
Uncontrolled Keywords: Empirical Analysis; Optical Fiber; Perception; Quality; Reliability; Semi-Urban; User-Networks
Date Deposited: 01 Sep 2025 13:55
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URI: https://eprint.scholarsrepository.com/id/eprint/5125