David Plumlee’s research while affiliated with Salt Lake Community College and other places

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Publications (2)


Eliciting deliberative and implemental mindsets in audit planning
  • Article

April 2023

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15 Reads

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3 Citations

Contemporary Accounting Research

Brett A. Rixom

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David Plumlee

There is concern that rather than critically deliberating specific circumstances, auditors focus on selecting and documenting defensible audit positions. Currently, subordinate auditors perform tasks mindful that they will be accountable for their work both inside (e.g., partners) and outside (e.g., PCAOB) the firm and adopt “implementation intentions” based on previous review experiences to guide their performance. In the context of fraud‐detection planning, we consider an alternative approach in which subordinate auditors work under contingent reward agreements under which they will be compensated for effective fraud‐detection plans. Lacking an anticipated course of action, they invoke a “deliberative mindset” in order to create a task strategy. In an experiment, auditors completed a fraud‐detection planning task under contingent rewards, accountability, or anonymity. We find that auditors operating under contingent rewards used deliberative mindsets. They were better able to identify potential fraud, select more effective procedures, and plan more hours for effective procedures. Auditors under accountability completed the planning task based on implementation intentions. They focused on broadly increasing audit hours across procedures, including allocating significantly more hours to less effective procedures. Mediation analysis shows that improved planning performance resulted from the use of deliberative mindsets and not implementation intentions.


Citations (1)


... The results show that external auditors perceive the most detection responsibility for financial statement fraud in contrast to internal auditors, who perceive similar detection responsibility across all three fraud types (financial statement fraud, asset misappropriation, and corruption). Rixom and Plumlee (2023) further investigate the effect of accountability, including rewards for fraud detection. In the first condition, the auditor with the most effective procedures for detecting fraud receives a financial reward to encourage fraud detection. ...

Reference:

How to detect fraud in an audit: a systematic review of experimental literature
Eliciting deliberative and implemental mindsets in audit planning
  • Citing Article
  • April 2023

Contemporary Accounting Research