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Interpersonal Affect, Accountability and Experience in Auditor Fraud Risk Judgments and the Processing of Fraud Cues

Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research

ISBN: 978-1-83867-346-8, eISBN: 978-1-83867-345-1

Publication date: 30 September 2019

Abstract

This chapter examines whether professional auditors’ affect toward client management influences fraud likelihood judgments and whether accountability and experience with fraud risk judgments moderate this effect. This research also explores the process by which affect influences fraud judgments by examining affect’s influence on the evaluation of fraud evidence cues. Results indicate that more positive affect toward the client results in lower fraud likelihood judgments. Accountability is found to moderate this effect, but only for experienced auditors. These findings have implications for fraud brainstorming sessions where all staff levels provide input into fraud risk assessments and because client characteristics are especially salient during these assessments. Importantly, results also support the proposition that affect impacts inexperienced auditors’ fraud assessments through errant attribution of client likability to evidence cues that refer to management, rather than biasing all client-related evaluations. Together, these findings suggest that education and training can be improved to better differentiate relevant and irrelevant cues in fraud judgment.

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Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

We gratefully acknowledge Martha Eining, David Plumlee, Brooke Elliott, Molly Mercer, Kimberly Moreno, and Kathryn Kadous for comments on earlier versions of this chapter. This chapter has also benefited from the comments of the anonymous reviewers, reviewers for the Coles College Working Paper Series at Kennesaw State University, and workshop participants at the University of Georgia, the University of Kentucky, and the University of South Florida.

Citation

Schafer, B.A. and Schafer, J.K. (2019), "Interpersonal Affect, Accountability and Experience in Auditor Fraud Risk Judgments and the Processing of Fraud Cues", Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research (Advances in Accounting Behavioural Research, Vol. 22), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 43-65. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1475-148820190000022004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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