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.