Management And Accounting Web

Behavioral Research in Accounting 2019

Volumes 31(1) and 31(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

Agyemang, I., D. D. Bay, G. L. Cook and P. Pacharn. 2019. Individual donor support for nonprofits: The roles of financial and emotional information. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 41-54.

Brazel, J. F., C. Gimbar, E. M. Maksymov and T. J. Schaefer. 2019. The outcome effect and professional skepticism: A replication and a failed attempt at mitigation. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 135-143.

Brink, W. D., L. S. Lee and J. S. Pyzoha. 2019. Values of participants in behavioral accounting research: A comparison of the M-Turk population to a nationally representative sample. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 97-117.

Buchheit, S., D. W. Dalton, T. J. Pollard and S. R. Stinson. 2019. Crowdsourcing intelligent research participants: A student versus MTurk comparison. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 93-106.

Cheng, M. M., T. Dinh, W. Schultze and M. Assel. 2019. The effect of bonus deferral on managers' investment decisions. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 31-49.

Chua, W. F. 2019. Radical developments in accounting thought? Reflections on positivism, the impact of rankings and research diversity. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 3-20.

Clune, R. R., D. R. Hermanson, J. G. Tompkins and Z. Ye. 2019. The governance committee process for U.S. publicly traded firms. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 21-40.

Eilifsen, A., N. Kochetova and W. F. Messier Jr. 2019. Mitigating the dilution effect of auditors' judgments using a frequency response mode. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 73-91.

Ekasingh, E., R. Simnett and W. J. Green. 2019. The effect of diversity and the mediating role of elaboration on multidisciplinary greenhouse gas assurance team effectiveness. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 81-96.

Emby, C., B. Zhao and J. Sieweke. 2019. Audit senior modeling fallibility: The effects of reduced error strain and enhanced error-related self-efficacy on audit juniors' responses to self-discovered errors. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 17-30.

Fleischman, G. M. and S. R. Valentine. 2019. How outcome information affects ethical attitudes and intentions to behave. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 1-15.

Hamilton, E. L. and J. Winchel. 2019. Investors' processing of financial communications: A persuasion perspective. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 133-156.

Herda, D. N., N. H. Cannon and R. F. Young. 2019. Workplace mindfulness and its effect on staff auditors' audit quality-threatening behavior. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 55-64.

Hobson, J. L., R. Marley, M. J. Mellon and D. E. Stevens. 2019. The presence and effect of winners' curse in the market for audit services: An experimental market examination. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 73-91.

Holt, T. P. 2019. An examination of nonprofessional investor perceptions of internal and external auditor assurance. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 65-80.

Khan, M. J. and P. C. Tronnes. 2019. p-hacking in experimental audit research. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 119-131.

Lynch, E. J. and L. M. Andiola. 2019. If eyes are the window to our soul, what role does eye-tracking play in accounting research? Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(2): 107-133.

Salterio, S. E. 2019. In celebration of 30 years of Behavioral Research in Accounting. Behavioral Research In Accounting 31(1): 1.