CPA
Vision 2011 and Beyond: Focus on the Horizon, published by the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), states that emotional skills are extremely
important and interpersonal skills are crucial for success as professional
accountants. During the audit process, auditors may experience emotional
reactions, such as liking or disliking toward client personnel, or anxiety
about components of tasks. Auditors also may also experience different moods
while conducting audits. Research reveals that an important consequence of
auditors experiencing emotions and moods is that these reactions can influence
their decision making and audit judgments.
A recently-published research article summarizes the results
and practice implications associated with several studies in a stream of
research that has examined the role of emotions and moods in auditing. Research
illustrates that auditors can experience emotional reactions toward a client
(e.g., likability) or an element of a task environment (e.g., anxiety from
dealing with certain types of people or about being held accountable) or
general moods unrelated to the judgment context (e.g., bad mood related to the
weather), which can result in judgment errors.
The research summarized in this paper reveals the potential
for auditors’ judgments to be susceptible to emotional reactions toward client
personnel and components of a task, as well as general negative and positive
moods. Given the fact that auditors’ emotional reactions and moods are
pervasive in the audit environment, such effects appear to be somewhat
inevitable. There is a potential for these effects to have significant negative
consequences. Therefore, a critical first step is to make auditors aware of the
potential for emotions and moods to inadvertently impact their judgments, and
how the reactions could impact audit effectiveness and efficiency.
For more information, read the 17-page research paper “The Role of Auditors’
Emotions and Moods on Audit Judgment: A Research Summary with Suggested
Practice Implications” by Sudip Bhattacharjee (Virginia Tech) and Kimberly
K. Moreno (Northeastern University). A manuscript has been accepted for
publication in an American
Accounting Association (AAA) journal. This preliminary version of the
manuscript was posted in the interest of making the information available for
distribution and citation as quickly as possible following acceptance.