Affiliation:
1. University of St. Thomas Associate Professor of Accounting Accounting 2115 Summit Ave UNITED STATES St. Paul Minnesota 55105 651-962-5442
2. University of North Texas
3. Minnesota State University, Mankato
Abstract
This study examines whether priming auditors with a forensic perspective improves their fraud-risk assessments and subsequent audit-plan responses. We contribute to the literature by investigating a potential improvement in fraud detection that encourages auditors to take a forensic specialist’s perspective, while retaining the audit tenets of efficiently identifying and responding to risk. We prime auditors with a forensic perspective and compare their fraud performance to unprimed auditors in both low- and high-risk contexts, finding primed auditors assess fraud-risk significantly higher in all fraud-risk environments. In a high-risk environment, primed auditors propose a more appropriate audit-plan response. Relevant to fraud detection, these audit-plan modifications were consistent with those determined by a panel of audit and forensic experts. They exhibit a sensitivity in the low-risk environment, whereby their risk response is similar with that of the unprimed auditors. Finally, we find perspective-taking affects risk response through its influence on risk assessment.
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Cited by
2 articles.
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