The effects of group affiliation and expectation formation on skepticism and confidence : implications for auditing.
Accounting researchers and regulators have often debated the issue of auditor rotation, and, specifically, the possibilities of auditors becoming too close to their clients. There has been less discussion, however, on the notion that auditors could also compromise their professional skepticism o...
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Format: | Research Report |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2008
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14560 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Accounting researchers and regulators have often debated the issue of auditor
rotation, and, specifically, the possibilities of auditors becoming too close to their clients. There
has been less discussion, however, on the notion that auditors could also compromise their
professional skepticism over time because of over-reliance on their own firms’ prior decisions in
repeat engagements. The impact of prior judgments on judgment skepticism could depend on
whether the prior judgments are associated with an affiliated source and on whether an
independent expectation is formed before viewing these prior judgments. Affiliated prior-year
judgments could promote an in-group bias that leads current-year auditors to overweight prior
judgments made by own-firm auditors and/or to increase their confidence in their own
judgments. This in turn may lead to ineffective audits. Using two experiments, this study
examines the conditions under and degree to which in-group bias exists and how it affects
individuals’ use of information (i.e., the extent of judgment disagreement) and confidence in
judgments. Results indicate that group affiliation does affect both extent of judgment agreement
and confidence. |
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