How Does an Initial Expectation Bias Influence Auditors' Application and Performance of Analytical Procedures?

Author:

Pike Byron J.1,Curtis Mary B.2,Chui Lawrence3

Affiliation:

1. Minnesota State University, Mankato

2. University of North Texas

3. University of St. Thomas

Abstract

ABSTRACT Prior research demonstrates that knowledge of unaudited balances biases auditors' expectations during analytical procedures. What is less understood is how these biases affect auditors' subsequent investigations and their conclusions about the reasonableness of a particular balance. We employ the selective accessibility model to examine the differences in analytical procedure performance when auditor expectations are formed with versus without knowledge of the client's unaudited financial statement balances. In an experimental setting, we found that auditors with knowledge of unaudited balances favored hypotheses and supporting information indicating that the client's balance was reasonably stated. Auditors who formed expectations without current-year figures were more willing to evaluate competing alternatives, could better identify the most pertinent information, and were significantly more likely to identify a material misstatement using an analytical procedure. Data Availability: Data are available from the authors on request.

Publisher

American Accounting Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting

Reference60 articles.

1. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).1988. Analytical Procedures . SAS No. 56 . New York, NY : AICPA .

2. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) . 2008 . Codification of Auditing Standards (Including AICPA and PCAOB Auditing and Attestation Standards) . New York, NY : AICPA .

3. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) . 2012 . Analytical Procedures: AICPA Audit Guide . New York, NY : AICPA .

4. The effect of client vs. decision aid as a source of explanations upon auditors' sufficiency judgments: A research note;Anderson;Behavioral Research in Accounting,2003

5. The mitigation of hindsight bias in judges' evaluation of auditor decisions;Anderson;Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory,1997

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