@article{228c292473284516875062ba5f132790,
title = "How do lead auditor instructions influence component auditors' evidence collection decisions? The joint influence of construal interpretations and responsibility",
abstract = "Regulators have raised concerns about the quality of component auditors' work. Of particular concern is that component auditors often do not adequately perform procedures and gather enough quality evidence. This failure is likely caused by component auditors' different interpretations of lead auditor instructions and by their lack of responsibility. Our interview findings suggest that component auditors tend to interpret lead auditor instructions concretely because they often receive detailed instructions from lead auditors. We propose that a responsibility prompt reminding component auditors to be aware of their obligations to the group audit engagement can improve their evidence collection. In two experiments, we find that our proposed responsibility prompt can effectively improve component auditors' evidence collection decisions and that this finding holds across different cultural settings. Our third experiment provides evidence that a responsibility prompt improves component auditors' evidence collection when provided to auditors who receive instructions that prime low-level (but not high-level) construals. Overall, our findings suggest that prompting component auditors to internalize the responsibility of a group audit engagement is a viable way to improve the quality of group audits.",
keywords = "audit instructions, audit judgments, evidence collection, group audit, regulatory fit",
author = "Skye Zhu and Soon-Yeow Phang",
note = "Funding Information: We are grateful for the feedback and suggestions from Tim Bauer (editor), Partha Mohanram (editor-in-chief), two anonymous reviewers, Elizabeth Carson, Arusha Cooray, Paul Coram, Neil Fargher, Anna Gold, Matthew Hall, Noel Harding, Susanna Ho, Jahan Khan, Gary Monroe, Robyn Moroney, Juliana Ng, Christian Peters, Ashna Prasad, Cameron Truong, Anne Waters, and conference participants at the 2021 European Accounting Association Conference and the 2021 AFAANZ AUASB/NZAuASB session, as well as workshop participants at the Australian National University (ANU) and Monash University. We thank James Bierstaker for generously providing his experimental instrument. We also thank the auditors who participated in this study. We gratefully acknowledge funding from the Department of Accounting at Monash University and the Research School of Accounting at ANU. This research was conducted under ANU and Monash University ethics protocol. This paper is based on the first author{\textquoteright}s doctorate dissertation completed at ANU. Open access publishing facilitated by Monash University, as part of the Wiley - Monash University agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors. Contemporary Accounting Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Canadian Academic Accounting Association.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1111/1911-3846.12911",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "291--619",
journal = "Contemporary Accounting Research",
issn = "1911-3846",
publisher = "Canadian Academic Accounting Association",
number = "1",
}