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Auditors: their mindset and their decisions
Author(s) -
Jan Bouwens
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
maandblad voor accountancy en bedrijfseconomie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2543-1684
pISSN - 0924-6304
DOI - 10.5117/mab.90.31181
Subject(s) - mindset , audit , intuition , perspective (graphical) , accounting , foundation (evidence) , auditor's report , psychology , face (sociological concept) , business , political science , sociology , computer science , law , artificial intelligence , cognitive science , social science
In the behavioral economics literature it is demonstrated that people that base their decisions on analysis rather than on their intuition are more likely to act: patiently, without losing perspective of the actual topic, without their decisions getting biased by the confidence they have in their own intellectual faculties, independently, and consistent with what new evidence suggests. I argue that it would be of great importance to study these dimensions for auditors as each of these characteristics are related to what society expects of an auditor. I suggest that auditors are studied in their day-to-day operations so that we can increase our understanding of the interplay between the mindset of the auditor and the working conditions auditors face. Data that allow for the design of these studies is now made available through the Foundation for Auditing Research.

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