TY - JOUR
T1 - To what extent areauditors'attitudes toward the evidence influenced by the self-fulfilling prophecy?
AU - Guiral, Andrés
AU - Ruiz, Emiliano
AU - Rodgers, Waymond
PY - 2011/2
Y1 - 2011/2
N2 - We examined whether auditors' attitudes toward the evidence in the going concern setting may be driven by their expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy effect. Following previous research on motivated reasoning, we assumed that the self-fulfilling prophecy effect could be interpreted as a potential motivational/incentive factor supporting auditors' reluctance to issue going concern opinions. The belief-adjustment model of Hogarth and Einhorn (1992) was used to estimate auditors' attitudes toward confirming and disconfirming evidence by manipulating, in a laboratory experiment, order of evidence and framing (viability versus failure), and capturing auditors' expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy effect. Our results indicate that auditors' expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy affected their attitudes toward confirming and disconfirming evidence. Further, we specifically find that auditors with higher expectations of the selffulfilling prophecy had a greater sensitivity to mitigating evidence and, at the same time, a lower tendency to favor contrary evidence.
AB - We examined whether auditors' attitudes toward the evidence in the going concern setting may be driven by their expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy effect. Following previous research on motivated reasoning, we assumed that the self-fulfilling prophecy effect could be interpreted as a potential motivational/incentive factor supporting auditors' reluctance to issue going concern opinions. The belief-adjustment model of Hogarth and Einhorn (1992) was used to estimate auditors' attitudes toward confirming and disconfirming evidence by manipulating, in a laboratory experiment, order of evidence and framing (viability versus failure), and capturing auditors' expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy effect. Our results indicate that auditors' expectations of the self-fulfilling prophecy affected their attitudes toward confirming and disconfirming evidence. Further, we specifically find that auditors with higher expectations of the selffulfilling prophecy had a greater sensitivity to mitigating evidence and, at the same time, a lower tendency to favor contrary evidence.
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U2 - 10.2308/aud.2011.30.1.173
DO - 10.2308/aud.2011.30.1.173
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:80051722009
SN - 0278-0380
VL - 30
SP - 173
EP - 190
JO - Auditing
JF - Auditing
IS - 1
ER -