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Impact of the type of audit team discussions on auditors' generation of material frauds
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journal contribution
posted on 2009-12-01, 00:00 authored by K T Trotman, Roger SimnettRoger Simnett, A KhalifaRecent changes to international auditing standards make it compulsory for members of the audit team to discuss at the planning stage the susceptibility of an entity to material misstatements due to fraud. Our study tests whether two enhanced forms of interacting group processes (brainstorming guidelines and pre-mortem instructions) have advantages over an interacting group without brainstorming guidelines (hereafter "interacting group"). Pre-mortem is a variation of the mental simulation idea whereby participants use mental simulation to search for flaws in their plans. We found that both the brainstorming groups and the pre-mortem groups generated a larger number of potential frauds than the interacting groups. These results were robust across a range of dependent variables used to measure quantity and quality of fraud items. We also found a negative relationship between the number of items listed and the assessed likelihood of fraud for the entity. © CAAA.
History
Journal
Contemporary Accounting ResearchVolume
26Issue
4Pagination
1115 - 1142Publisher DOI
ISSN
0823-9150eISSN
1911-3846Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleUsage metrics
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No categories selectedKeywords
Social SciencesBusiness, FinanceBusiness & EconomicsBrainstormingFraudInteracting groupsMental simulationPre-mortem strategyINTERPERSONAL INTERACTION PERSPECTIVEDECISION-MAKING RESEARCHBRAINSTORMING GROUPSINDIVIDUAL-PERFORMANCEJUDGMENT PERFORMANCEPRODUCTIVITY LOSSIDEA GENERATIONRISK-ASSESSMENTIDENTIFICATIONTHINKING
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