Elaine Wang

Elaine Wang
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst

About

15
Publications
2,149
Reads
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482
Citations
Current institution
University of Massachusetts Amherst

Publications

Publications (15)
Article
Informed by Perceptual Deterrence Theory, we conduct multiple experiments to investigate when and how auditor actions can help deter manager opportunism. In Study 1A, we find that managers are less likely to use real earnings management (REM) when they expect auditors to both increase scrutiny and communicate their observations to the board. Howeve...
Article
We investigate whether and how a "critical audit matter" (CAM) disclosure affects managers' real operating decisions in two contexts (issuing a loan that decreases versus increases the average risk profile of loan portfolios, or choosing to hedge versus speculate on commodity risk). We expect a CAM disclosure increases disclosure costs and implies...
Article
In a globalized audit environment, regulators and researchers have expressed concerns about inconsistent audit quality across nations, with a particular emphasis on Chinese audit quality. Prior research suggests Chinese audit quality may be lower than U.S. audit quality due to a weaker institutional environment (e.g., lower litigation and inspectio...
Article
We experimentally investigate how jargon affects investment willingness for investors with different industry knowledge, and whether such effects vary with good or bad jargon. We find that for investors without industry knowledge, jargon decreases investment willingness because it decreases understanding. However, for investors with some but low in...
Article
Jargon and syntactic complexity are two independent determinants of readability, and both aspects are commonly used in management disclosures. While prior accounting studies have documented the effect of syntactic complexity on investors’ judgments, the effect of jargon has not been explored. We conduct an experiment to examine how jargon, syntacti...
Article
Recent studies document that market participants react positively to the positive language sentiment or tone embedded in financial disclosures, and that investors’ reactions to negative news are more muted with poor disclosure readability. However, while language sentiment and readability co-occur in practice, their joint effects remain largely une...
Article
We conduct an experiment to examine the effects of guidance frequency (frequent vs. infrequent) and guidance goal (accuracy vs. meet/beat vs. truthful) on managers' operating decisions. We find that frequent guiders sacrifice total earnings for quarterly earnings predictability irrespective of their guidance goals. Furthermore, when guidance is inf...
Article
We conduct two experiments with experienced accountants to investigate how fair value accounting affects managers' real economic decisions. In experiment 1, we find that participants are more likely to make suboptimal decisions (e.g., forgo economically sound hedging opportunities) when both the economic and fair value accounting impact information...
Article
We conduct an experiment to investigate how readability (high vs. low) and benchmark performance consistency (consistent vs. inconsistent) influence investors’ earnings judgments. We adopt management guidance and year-ago quarter performance as two benchmarks. In either the beat or miss prior guidance setting, we manipulate benchmark performance co...

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