Management And Accounting Web

Behavioral Research in Accounting 2014

Volumes 26(1) and 26(2)

Provided by James R. Martin, Ph.D., CMA
Professor Emeritus, University of South Florida

Behavioral Research in Accounting 1989-2023  |  Journal Updates by Year

Behavioral Research in Accounting. 2014. Annual editor report. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 161.

Brandon, D. M., J. H. Long, T. M. Loraas, J. Mueller-Phillips and B. Vansant. 2014. Online instrument delivery and participant recruitment services: Emerging opportunities for behavioral accounting research. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 1-23.

Brazel, J. F., K. L. Jones and D. F. Prawitt. 2014. Auditors' reactions to inconsistencies between financial and nonfinancial measures: The interactive effects of fraud risk assessment and decision prompt. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 131-156.

Du, H., C. M. Lehmann and V. L. Willson. 2014. Technology-facilitated contribution behavior: An experimental investigation. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 97-130.

Krische, S. D., P. R. Sanders and S. D. Smith. 2014. Management credibility and investment risk: An experimental investigation of lease accounting alternatives. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 109-130.

Kruis, A. and S. K. Widener. 2014. Managerial influence in performance measurement system design: A recipe for failure? Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 1-34.

Miller, J. S. and L. M. Sedor. 2014. Do stock prices influence analysts' earnings forecasts? Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 85-108.

Peytcheva, M., A. M. Wright and B. Majoor. 2014. The impact of principles-based versus rules-based accounting standards on auditors' motivations and evidence demands. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 51-72.

Riley, T. J., G. R. Semin and A. C. Yen. 2014. Patterns of language use in accounting narratives and their impact on investment-related judgments and decisions. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 59-84.

Schmidt, R. N. 2014. The effects of auditors' accessibility to "tone at the top" knowledge on audit judgments. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 73-96.

Seifert, D. L., W. W. Stammerjohan and R. B. Martin. 2014. Trust, organizational justice, and whistleblowing: A research note. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 157-168.

Tang, F., T. J. Hess, J. S. Valacich and J. T. Sweeney. 2014. The effects of visualization and interactivity on calibration in financial decision-making. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(1): 25-58.

Viator, R. E., P. L. Bagley, B. Grant and N. L. Harp. 2014. Measuring reflective cognitive capacity: A methodological recommendation for accounting research of feedback effects. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 131-160.

Wright, A. M. and S. Wright. 2014. Modification of the audit report: Mitigating investor attribution by disclosing the auditor's judgment. Behavioral Research In Accounting 26(2): 35-50.