Advances in accounting : a research annual

Bibliographic Information

Advances in accounting : a research annual

editor, Bill N. Schwartz ; associate editors, Philip M.J. Reckers, James W. Deitrick, James H. Scheiner

JAI Press, 1984-

  • v. 1: 1984
  • v. 2: 1985
  • v. 3: 1986
  • v. 4: 1987
  • v. 5: 1987
  • v. 6: 1988
  • v. 7: 1989
  • v. 8: 1990
  • v. 9: 1991
  • v. 10: 1992
  • v. 11: 1993
  • v. 12: 1994
  • v. 13: 1995
  • v. 14: 1996
  • v. 15: 1997
  • v. 16: 1998
  • v. 17
  • v. 18
  • v. 19
  • supplement 1, 1989
  • v. 20
  • v. 21
  • v. 22
  • v. 23

  • 愛知大学 経営総合科学研究所

    v. 11: 1993336.9:A16:111042421304

  • 青森公立大学 図書館

    v. 1: 1984336.9/A16/10102100040211, v. 2: 1985336.9/A16/20102100042291, v. 3: 1986336.9/A16/30102100042307, v. 4: 1987336.9/A16/40102100042314, v. 5: 1987336.9/A16/50102100042321, v. 6: 1988336.9/A16/60102100042338, v. 7: 1989336.9/A16/70102100042345, v. 8: 1990336.9/A16/80102100042352, v. 9: 1991336.9/A16/90102100042369, v. 10: 1992336.9/A16/100102100098632, v. 11: 1993336.9/A16/110102100079334, v. 12: 1994336.9/A16/120102100079259, v. 13: 1995336.9/A16/130102100137614, v. 14: 1996336.9/A16/140102100256674, v. 15: 1997336.9/A16/150102100308410, v. 16: 1998336.9/A16/160102100308380, v. 17336.9/A16/170102100594196, v. 18336.9/A16/180102100582384, v. 19336.9/A16/190102100577779, supplement 1, 1989336.9/A16/S-10102100042376, v. 20336.9/A16/200102100561532

  • 旭川市立大学 図書館

    v. 1: 1984336.9/A16/1Y8676, v. 16: 1998336.9/A16/16133995

  • 亜細亜大学 図書館

    v. 22336.9/A 16/2212049162, v. 23336.9/A 16/2312050989, v. 21336.9/A 16/2112046660

  • 岩手県立大学 メディアセンター

    v. 12: 1994336.9:A:12100841527

  • 追手門学院大学 附属図書館

    v. 1: 1984002404309, v. 2: 1985002404317, v. 3: 1986002404325, v. 4: 1987002404291, v. 5: 1987002404267, v. 6: 1988002404275, v. 7: 1989002404259, v. 9: 1991002404242, v. 10: 1992002404234, v. 11: 1993002404218, v. 12: 1994002404358, v. 13: 1995002404382, v. 14: 1996002404374, v. 15: 1997001070499, v. 16 : 1998001290964, supplement 1, 1989002404366

  • Oita University Library

    v. 1: 1984658.15||A18-1||110419949

  • Osaka University of Economics & Law Library

    v. 1: 1984336.90544047, v. 2: 1985336.90544048, v. 3: 1986336.90544049, v. 4: 1987336.90544050, v. 5: 1987336.90544051, v. 6: 1988336.90544052, v. 7: 1989336.90544053, supplement 1, 1989336.90544057

  • 大阪公立大学 杉本図書館

    v. 1: 1984679//A11100065827, v. 2: 1985679//A11100065835, v. 3: 1986679//A11100091823,00002174126, v. 4: 1987679//A11100065843, v. 5: 1987679//A11100065850,C-65520, v. 6: 1988679//A11100065868, v. 7: 1989679//A11100063616, v. 8: 1990679//A11100063624, v. 9: 1991679//A11100084117, supplement 1, 1989679//A11100063632

  • 大阪産業大学 綜合図書館

    v. 1: 1984336.9/302/101356302, v. 10: 1992336.9/ADV02793826, v. 11: 1993336.9/ADV02770048

Search this Book/Journal
Note

Vol. 12: 1994: editor, Bill N. Schwartz ; associate editors, Philip M.J. Reckers, Eugene G. Chewning,Jr., Wanda A. Wallac

Vol. 13: 1995- : editor, Philip M.J. Reckers ; associate editors, Eugene G. Chewning,Jr. [et al]

Vol. 16: 1998- : Stamford, Conn.

Vol. 18: 2001: edited by Philip M.J. Reckers ; associate editors, Eugene C. Chewning,Jr ... [et al.]

Vol. 18: 2001-: Amsterdam/JAI

Suppl. 1, 1989: editor, Jagdish Gangolly ; associate editors, Marcos Massoud, Dennis B. Kneier

Vol. 19: 2002: edited by Philip M.J. Reckers ; associate editors, Loren Margheim ...[et al]

Vol. 20: 2003- : editor, Philip M.J. Reckers ; associate editors, Salvador Carmona ... [et al.]

Publisher varies: Elsevier/JAI

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents
Volume

v. 14: 1996 ISBN 9780762301614

Description

This series focuses on the academic and theoretical side of financial accounting, accounting education and auditing. The articles range from the empirical to the analytical, and some cover the development of new technologies. This volume includes an analysis of the adoption of SFAS No. 96, Accounting for Income Taxes. Other areas covered include author-client interaction, bankruptcy prediction, environmental performance and disclosures, the timing of writedown disclosures, and gender effects in public accounting.

Table of Contents

  • Vague wording effects on auditors' complexity judgments of risk related audit tasks, Mohammad J. Abdolmohammadi, William J. Read
  • neural networks and bankruptcy prediction - funds flows, accrual ratios, and accounting data, Barbro Back et al
  • accountability and escalation of commitment - the effects of compensation and disclosure, Jesse D. Beele, James E. Hunton
  • value implications of unfilled order backlogs, Bruce K. Behn
  • perceptions of supervisor/subordinate task-specific expertise as a moderator of participative budgeting outcomes, B. Douglas Clinton et al
  • a comprehensive analysis of the adoption of SFAS No. 96 - Accounting for Income Taxes, Cynthia Firey Eakin
  • strategic auditor-client interaction, Joseph Fisher, Jeffrey W. Schatzberg, Brian P. Shapiro
  • association between environmental performance and environmental disclosures - an assessment, Martin Freedman, Bikki Jaggi
  • an examination of direct and indirect gender effects in public accounting, Eric N. Johnson et al
  • a re-examination of auditors' initial belief assessment and evidence search, Jeffrey J. McMillan, Richard A. White
  • the interactive effect of budget-based compensation, organizational commitment, and job involvement on managers' propensities to create budgetary slack, Hossein Nouri, Robert J. Parker
  • an empirical analysis of the timing of writedown disclosures, Srinivasan Ragothaman, Bruce Bublitz
  • the relationship of career stage to job outcomes and role stress - a study of external auditors, James E. Rebele et al
  • an examination of the feature-positive effect in auditors' evaluation of accounting estimates, Philip M.J. Reckers, Bernard Wong-On-Wing.
Volume

v. 15: 1997 ISBN 9780762302949

Description

This series focuses on the academic and theoretical side of the profession in the areas of financial accounting, accounting education and auditing. Articles range from empirical and analytical, to the development of new technologies.

Table of Contents

The association between audit reports and bankruptcies: further evidence (D.V. Rama et al.). Retention of women in public accounting: directions for future research (K.L. Hooks et al.). Effects of engagement-wide inherent risk factors on auditors' evaluations of multiple explanations from client and audit team sources (S. Ayers, S.E. Kaplan). An investigation of the relevance of disclosure of asset composition in assessing distress risk of savings institutions (S.J. Roohani, Z. Rezaee). Evidence of the relations between firm characteristics and reserve revisions in the petroleum industry (F.L. Ayres et al.). Accounting accruals and the incremental information content of earnings and cash flows from operations (C.S. Agnes Cheng et al.). An investigation of the impact of market discipline on individuals' price revisions (C.E. Davis et al.). The impact of earnings management of bank risk premia (T.R. Robinson, J. Grant). The comparison of dysfunctional behaviors by tax accountants and auditors under time budget pressure (T. Dalton, T. Kelley). A comparison of AHP and ANOVA decision modeling techniques in internal control procedure evaluations (S.A. Webber, J.M. Hassell). A longitudinal analysis of environmental disclosure practices (S.D. Stanwick, R.H. Tabor). A Bayesian analysis of cost-effectiveness of auditing for small businesses (A.V. Deshmukh et al.). Participative budgeting under uncertainty: multi-period experimental evidence (L. Kyj, P.S. Greenberg).
Volume

v. 16: 1998 ISBN 9780762305131

Description

The series focuses on the academic and theoretical side of the profession in the areas of financial accounting, accounting education and auditing. The articles range from empirical, to analytical, to the development of new technologies.
Volume

v. 17 ISBN 9780762306114

Table of Contents

List of contributors. Editorial board. Statement of purpose and review procedures. Editorial policy and manuscript form guidelines. An empirical study of operating cash flow usefulness in predicting savings and loan financial distress (A.H. Catanach Jr.). Value relevance of the earnings impact of lease capitalization (C.S. Agnes Cheng, S-J. Hsieh). A meta-analysis of materiality studies (E.G. Chewning Jr., J.L. Higgs). Financial decisions and top management team composition (C.S. Ciccotello et al.). Insider trading and the early adoption of SFAS 96: a test of the signaling hypothesis (C.F. Eakin, J.D. Gramlich). A meta-analysis of the effect of task properties on business failure prediction accuracy (J.W. Lin, M.I. Hwang). Three's a crowd: an examination of state statutes and court decisions that narrow accountant liability to third parties for negligence (C. Pacini et al.). Management plans and SAS no going concern resolutions (R. Riley et al.). Accounting versus engineering, law, and medicine: perceptions of influential high school teachers (J.R. Hardin et al.). Analyst forecasts and analyst actuals in the presence of nonrecurring gains and losses: evidence of inconsistency (T.R. Skantz, B.G. Pierce). An ex ante test of the Jenkins Committee disclosure recommendations (T.V. Eaton, K.G. Stanga).
Volume

v. 18 ISBN 9780762307197

Description

Advances in Accounting" was founded to provide a forum for discourse among and between academic and practising accountants on issues of significance to the future of the discipline. Emphasis was placed on original commentary and creative research that would substantively advance our understanding of behavioural and financial markets phenomena relevant to real world choices. Technology and global competition have brought tremendous changes in business and accounting. A wide array of unsolved questions continue to challenge a profession that defies definition and which is continuously reinventing itself. This volume focuses on questions of the "value added" by accounting information and audit services. Articles explore the important task of valuing corporate entities, and investigate challenges currently faced by auditors (client selection, pricing behaviour, and audit quality). Finally, contributors address the human side of career opportunities in the discipline and whether adequate human resources are flowing into the profession today. The theme of this collective effort is new solutions for new problems.
Volume

v. 19 ISBN 9780762308712

Description

This series aims to provide a forum for discourse among and between academic and practicing accountants on issues of significance to the future of the discipline. Emphasis is placed on original commentary, critical analysis and creative research that would substantively advance our understanding of financial markets and behavioral phenomenon relevant to real world choices. Technology and global competition have brought tremendous changes over the last two decades of the 20th century. A wide array of unsolved questions continues to plague a profession under fire in the aftermath of the Enron bankruptcy. Questions about adequacy of financial accounting and auditing standards, procedures and practices abound today. This volume of Advances in Accounting includes articles that address the predictability of corporate earnings, and recently challenged practices in financial reporting. It also addresses unethical auditor practices and the ex-post review of auditor decisions, and evaluation of corporate chief executives' performance. Other articles address important corporate budgetary issues, tax services and accounting education.

Table of Contents

  • Employee stock options and pro-forma earnings management, (T.A. Baker et al.)
  • A note on testing a model of cognitive budgetary participation processes using a structured equation modelling approach, (V.K. Chong)
  • An experimental market analysis of auditor work-level reduction decisions (M. Coller et al.)
  • Fixed cost allocation and the constrained product mix decision, (S. Haka et al.)
  • Do initial public offering firms understate the allowance for bad debts?, (S.B. Jackson et al.)
  • Common uncertainty effects on the use of relative performance evaluation for corporate chief executives, (L. Kren)
  • The effects of procedural justice and evaluative styles on the relationship between budgetary participation and performance, (C.M. Lau, E.W. Lim)
  • An analysis of the accuracy of long term earnings predictions, (K.S. Lorek, G.L. Willinger)
  • A preliminary framework in examining the influence of outcome information on evaluation of auditor decisions, (D.J. Lowe, P.M.J. Reckers)
  • Income level and income type as determinants of tax return preparation fees: an empirical investigation, (D.S. Mauldin et al.)
  • Product decisions in practice, (J.W. Paul, S.C. Weaver)
  • Evolving research benchmarks, (P.M. Johnson et al.).
Volume

v. 20 ISBN 9780762310661

Description

Now in its 20th edition, "Advances in Accounting" continues to provide an important forum for discourse among and between academic and practicing accountants on issues of significance to the future of the discipline. Emphasis continues to be placed on original commentary, critical analysis and creative research - research that promises to substantively advance our understanding of financial markets, behavioral phenomenon and regulatory policy. Technology and aggressive global competition have propelled tremendous changes over the two decades since AIA was founded. A wide array of unsolved questions continues to plague a profession under fire in the aftermath of one financial debacle after another. This volume of "Advances in Accounting" includes articles reflective of recent economic distress: articles on the effects of post bankruptcy financial reporting, measurement of decline in earnings persistence, re-estimations of bankruptcy prediction models, and an understanding of new assurance needs. It also looks at trends of significance to academics (trends in research and dissertations focus) and practitioners (trends in IS audits). With this 20th volume, "Advances in Accounting" makes a new commitment to the global arena by introduction of an International Section and a new international associate editor. As never before, the accounting profession is seeking ways to reinvent itself and recapture relevance and credibility. AIA likewise continues to champion change through this revised global editorial commitment.

Table of Contents

  • The effects of post-bankruptcy financing on going concern reporting, L.J. Abbott et al
  • a time-series approach to measuring the decline in quarterly earnings persistence, S.P. Baginski et al
  • understanding the satisfaction process for new assurance services:- the role of attitudes, expectations, disconfirmation and performance, K. Gladden Burke et al.
  • re-estimations of the Zmijewski and Ohlson bankruptcy prediction models, J.S. Grice, Jr., M.T. Dugan
  • prolific authors of accounting literature, J.R. Hasselback et al
  • the impact of non-audit service fee disclosure requirements on audit fee and non-audit service fee in the United Kingdom - an empirical analysis, G. Iyer, V. Iyer
  • the evolving role of IS audit: a field study comparing the perceptions of IS and financial auditors, V.P. Vendrzyk, N.A. Bagranoff. International perspectives: the decision-facilitating role of management accounting systems on managerial performance - the influence of locus of control and task uncertainty, V.K. Chong, I.R.C. Eggleton
  • change in strategy and MCS - a match over time?, Ralph Kober, J. Ng
  • do auditors assess the systematic market risk in their audit pricing decisions? international evidence, P. Sahlstrom, J. Nikkinen
  • trends in accounting doctoral dissertations - 1991 - 2000, M. Porporato et al
  • the economic value added (EVA) - an analysis of market reaction, B. Deya Tortella, S. Brusco.
Volume

v. 21 ISBN 9780762312030

Description

Now in its twenty-first edition, Advances in Accounting continues to provide an important forum for discourse among and between academic and practicing accountants on issues of significance to the future of the discipline. Emphasis continues to be placed on original commentary, critical analysis and creative research - research that promises to substantively advance our understanding of financial markets, behavioral phenomenon and regulatory policy. Technology and aggressive global competition have propelled tremendous changes over the two decades since AIA was founded. A wide array of unsolved questions continues to plague a profession under fire in the aftermath of one financial debacle after another and grabbling with the advent of international accounting standards. This volume of Advances in Accounting not surprisingly includes articles reflective of recent focus on corporate governance, earnings management and the influence of the CEO, the accuracy of earnings forecasts and the value relevance or voluntary and mandated disclosures. This volume also looks at challenges facing the academic community with respect to technology and addresses pedagogical advances holding promise. AIA continues its commitment to the global arena by publishing research with an international perspective in the International Section inaugurated in Volume 20. As never before the accounting profession is seeking ways to reinvent itself and recapture relevance and credibility. AIA likewise continues to champion forward thinking research.

Table of Contents

The Effect of Partner Preferences on the Development of Risk-Adjusted Program Plans. (J.L. Bierstaker, A. Wright). The Value Relevance of Earnings and Book Value Under Pooling and Purchase Accounting. (C.S. Agnes Cheng, K.R. Ferris, Su-Jane Hseih, Yuli Su). Earnings Management and Forced Ceo Dismissal. (L. Guan, C.J. Wright, S.L. Leikam). The Decision to Diclose Environmental Information: A Research Review and Agenda. (T.M. Lee, P.D. Hutchison). The Voluntary Disclosure of Advertising Expenditures: The Case of the Pharmaceutical Industry and Healthcare Reform. (J. Legoria). An Analysis of the First Two Decades of Advances in Accounting. (M.J. Meyer, J. Rigsby, D.J. Lowe). The Relative Accuracy of Analysts' Published Forecasts Versus Whisper Forecasts Surrounding the Adoption of Regulation FD. (L. Rees, D. Adut). The Impact of Management Image and Non-Audit Service Fees on Investors' Perceptions of Earnings Quality. (S. Solomon, P.M.J. Reckers, D.J. Lowe). Perspectives On Education. The "Shock" Factor In Students' Performance In Accounting Examinations. (A.M.G. Gelardi, C.E.N. Emby). Electronic-Commerce Education: Insights from Academicians and Practitioners. (Z. Rezaee, R. Elam, J.H. Cassidy). Using Cases in the Classroom. (P. Smith). Technology and the Accounting Curriculum: Where it is and Where it Needs to Be. (L. Solomon, C.I. Hastings). International Perspectives. Corporate Characteristics, Governance Rules and the Extent of Voluntary Disclosure in Spain. (Marosario Babio Arcay, Maflora Muino Vazquez). The Importance of Procedural Fairness in Budgeting. (Chong M. Lau, S.L.C. Tan). Research Note. High Impact Behavioral Accounting Articles and Authors. (P.M.J. Reckers, S. Solomon).
Volume

v. 22 ISBN 9780762313600

Description

The twenty-second volume of Advances in Accounting continues to provide an important forum for discourse among and between academic and practicing accountants on issues of significance to the future of the discipline. Emphasis continues to be placed on original commentary, critical analysis and creative research - research that promises to substantively advance our understanding of financial markets, behavioral phenomenon and regulatory policy. Technology and aggressive global competition have propelled tremendous changes over the two decades since AIA was founded. A wide array of unsolved questions continues to plague a profession under fire in the aftermath of one financial debacle after another and grabbling with the advent of international accounting standards. This volume of Advances in Accounting not surprisingly includes several articles reflective on auditor independence, auditor tenure, auditor rotation and non-audit service fees. This volume also looks at challenges facing the academic community with respect to pressures placed on faculty to publish; a data driven commentary is provided by the in-coming editor of the European Accounting Review. Other papers examine the use of financial data to estimate risk premiums, and measure the operating efficiency of firms; and re-examine market reaction to quarterly earnings. AIA continues its commitment to the global arena by publishing several papers with an international perspective. As never before the accounting profession is seeking ways to reinvent itself and recapture relevance and credibility. AIA likewise continues to champion forward thinking research.
Volume

v. 23 ISBN 9780762314256

Description

This series focuses on the academic and theoretical side of the profession in the areas of financial accounting, accounting education and auditing. Articles range from empirical and analytical, to the development of new technologies.Advances in Accounting is now available online at ScienceDirect - full-text online from volume 17 onwards.

Table of Contents

The effect of innovation activity on firm performance: the experience of taiwan Asokan Anandarajan, Chen-Lung Chin, Hsin-Yi Chi and Picheng Lee An examination of factors associated with the type and number of internal control documentation formats James Bierstaker, Diane Jarvin and D. Jordan Lowe Redefining "materiality": an exercise to restore ethical financial reporting Govind Iyer and Stacey Whitecotton EFFECTS OF SUBORDINATE LIKEABILITY AND BALANCED SCORECARD FORMAT ON PERFORMANCE-RELATED JUDGMENTS Steve Kaplan, Michael Peterson and Janet Samuels THE MODERATING EFFECTS ON MANAGER'S ETHICAL JUDGMENT ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BUDGET PARTICIPATION AND BUDGETS SLACK Adam Maiga and Fred A. Jacobs An examination of first call's company issued guidance database Lynn Rees and Rebecca Wynalda The information content of reverse stock splits Dahlia Robinson Earnings management practices of family owned firms Yen Tong Financial reporting factors affecting donations to charitable organizations John Trussel and Linda Parsons
Volume

v. 10: 1992 ISBN 9781559384162

Description

Volume 10 in a series which aims to meet the needs of both the academic and the practitioner, and which features articles which address contemporary issues and/or problems in financial or managerial accounting, accounting education or auditing; and display sound analyses.

Table of Contents

  • Decision aids for error quantifications in attribute sampling - circumvention, efficiency, and experience effects, Mohammad J. Abdolmohammadi
  • an empirical investigation of the effects of presentation format and personality on auditor's judgement in applying analytical procedures, John C. Anderson and Philip M.J. Reckers
  • the association between auditors' uncertainty opinions and business failures, H. Perrin Garsombke and Seungmook Choi
  • educational preparation for auditors, promotion time, and turnover - a survival analysis, J. David Spiceland et al
  • audit disclosure of consistency - an analysis of loan officer reaction to SAS no.58, Marshall A. Geiger
  • the incorporation of ethics into the accounting curriculum, James H. Thompson and Timothy L. McCoy
  • noisy performance measures in CEO compensation contracts - an empirical analysis, Susan Pourciau
  • a re-examination of the relative importance of CPA firms' performance evaluation criteria, John M. Hassell et al
  • an analysis of the relative contribution of experience/education to the professional development of auditors, Philip H. Siegel et al
  • the effects of mode of information presentation and cognitive style on bond rating change decisions, Michael C. Nibbelin et al
  • the impact of audit technology approach on organizational-professional commitment in large public accounting firms, Richard G. Schroeder and Alan Reinstein
  • the interactive effects of humour and type A behaviour - accounting perspective and evidence, Freddie Choo
  • an investigation of lending decision in the oil and gas industry, Linda Nichols
  • start-up costs and the comparability of financial statements, Richard A. Samuelson
  • the sensitivity of failure prediction models to alternative definitions of failure, Paul R. Bahnson and Jon W. Bartley
  • an alternative graphical intuitive extrapolation procedure - evidence concerning the accuracy of forecasts, Roger G. Holland et al
  • the relation between earnings impact and timing of mandatory accounting standards adoption - the case of SFAS 2 adoption, Emeka Ofobike.
Volume

v. 11: 1993 ISBN 9781559386555

Description

This volume of an annual collection of research papers contains articles on financial and managerial accounting, accounting education, auditing and research methodology. The editors have selected material to appeal to practitioners as well as educators.

Table of Contents

  • The influence of ethical reasoning on auditors' perceptions of management's competence and integrity, Lawrence A. Ponemon
  • expected value - a relevant attribute, Alan K. Ortegren and Thomas E. King
  • accounting method and tax status as determinants of shareholders' gains in corporate acquisitions, Kathleen M. Dunne et al
  • characteristics of firms making actuarial changes, Theresa P. Rollins
  • an empirical investigation of the measurement of pension obligations by bond rating analysts, Jon J. Maher and J. Edward Ketz
  • accounting disclosure practices and the lending decision, Larry R. David et al
  • financial leverage and the incremental information content of cash flow and accrual components of earnings, Pieter T. Elgers and May H. Lo
  • corporate seasonality as a potential determinant of earnings forecast accuracy, Peter A. Silhan and Suzanne M. Luttman
  • firms' exchange listings and five-year price volatility, Miin H. Guo
  • auditor loss exposure - factors and preliminary materiality judgements - evidence from practice, Robin W. Roberts and John T. Sweeney
  • an assessment of the potential effect of big eight firm mergers on competition in the market for audit services, Paul A. Copley.
Volume

v. 12: 1994 ISBN 9781559387743

Description

This volume of an annual collection of research papers contains articles on financial and managerial accounting, accounting education, auditing and research methodology. The editors have selected material to appeal to practitioners as well as educators.

Table of Contents

  • An examination of financial reporting alternatives for associated enterprises, Thomas E. King and Valdean C. Lembke
  • the corroborative relation between earnings and cash flow information, Kirk L. Philipich et al
  • investor valuation of postretirement benefits disclosed under SFAS No. 106 - an empirical investigation, V. Gopalakrishana
  • economic determinants of the assumed interest rate in pension accounting, Sunkook Kwon
  • an examination of the security price reaction to SFAS 94, James P. Reburn and Mary Beth Mohrman
  • an empirical evaluation of test item sequencing effects in the managerial accounting classroom - further evidence and extensions, David E. Stout and Donald E. Wygal
  • a concepts approach to teaching the first course in accounting, Cindy D. Edmonds and Thomas P. Edmonds
  • practitioner note
  • enhancing communication during the recruiting process - the view of accounting students and accounting recruiters, Jeffrey L. McMillan et al
  • an empirical examination of the relationships among leader behaviours, audit team performance and staff satisfaction, William R. Pasewark et al
  • further evidence of auditors' asymmetric reactions to analytical review results, Jeffrey R. Cohen
  • an examination of the work-related motivational needs of professional EDP auditors, N. Ross Quarles
  • the effect of compatibility between self assessment and the provided hypothesis on auditors' information search strategies, Joanna L. Ho
  • theme on fraud, comment, Wanda A. Wallace
  • use of standards in auditing for hidden actions, David Finley
  • analysts' forecasts as an exogenous risk indicator in analytical auditing, Thomas C. Carlderon
  • academician's comments on analysts' forecasts as an exogenous risk indicator in analytical auditing, John M. Hassell
  • practitioner's comments on analysts' forecasts as an exogenous risk indicator in analytical auditing, Richard W. Kreutzfeldt
  • internal auditor's independence and interactions with audit committees - challenges of form and substance, K. Raghunandan and Joseph A. McHugh.
Volume

v. 13: 1995 ISBN 9781559388818

Description

This volume of an annual collection of research papers contains articles on financial and managerial accounting, accounting education, auditing and research methodology. The editors have selected material to appeal to practitioners as well as educators.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 Main articles: the determinants of audit delay, Michael Aitken et al
  • the audit review process and its effect on auditor's assessments of evidence from management, Urton Anderson et al
  • evidence of the security market's ex ante assessment of differential management forecast accuracy
  • assessing accounting doctoral programmes by their graduates' research productivity, James R. Hasselback and Alan Reinstein
  • an investigation of the feasibility of using statistical-based models as analytical procedures, Kenneth S. Lorek et al
  • an investigation of the determinants of accounting method choice among initial public offering firms, John D. Neill et al
  • examining the dimensionality of the ethical decision making process of certified management accountants, R. Eric Reidenbach and Donald P. Robin
  • additional evidence of auditor changes - the effects of client financial condition, Earl R. Wilson et al. Part 2 Professional notes: on the use of contingent valuation methods to estimate environmental costs, Marlbeth Coller and Glenn W. Harrison
  • accounting for debt conversions - current and future alternatives, Alan K. Ortegren and Thomas E. King
  • auditor materiality judgement and consistency modifications - further evidence from SFAS No 96, Michael L. Costigan and Daniel T. Simon
  • indirect cash flow measure versus cash flows reported persuant to SFAS No 96, Hana ElSheika and Paul Munter
  • the relative importance of operating cash flows and accural income in explaining stock returns - a cross-sectional approach, Gary R. Freeman and Glen R. Larsen.

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Details
  • NCID
    BA01326153
  • ISBN
    • 0892323973
    • 0892325143
    • 0892326557
    • 0892326859
    • 089232788X
    • 0892328924
    • 0892329602
    • 1559380675
    • 1559382554
    • 1559384166
    • 155938655X
    • 1559387742
    • 1559388811
    • 0762301619
    • 0762302941
    • 0762305134
    • 0762306114
    • 0762307196
    • 0762308710
    • 1559380470
    • 0762310669
    • 0762312033
    • 9780762313600
    • 9780762314256
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Greenwich, Conn.
  • Pages/Volumes
    v.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
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