1989
DOI: 10.1016/0361-3682(89)90006-8
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Assessing inherent risk during audit planning: The development of a knowledge based model

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Cited by 26 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…It would seem that variables pertaining to (a) the characteristics of the management of the company, and (b) whether this is the first year that the audit has been undertaken by the same firm, were perceived as important at the financial statement level. These findings are consistent with the evidence from Monroe et al (1993), Johnson (1987), Colbert (1988) and Peters et al (1989). At the account balance and class of transactions level, statements associated with a history of errors were perceived by the respondents to be important determinants of inherent risk.…”
Section: Auditor's Responses On the Importance Of Variablessupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It would seem that variables pertaining to (a) the characteristics of the management of the company, and (b) whether this is the first year that the audit has been undertaken by the same firm, were perceived as important at the financial statement level. These findings are consistent with the evidence from Monroe et al (1993), Johnson (1987), Colbert (1988) and Peters et al (1989). At the account balance and class of transactions level, statements associated with a history of errors were perceived by the respondents to be important determinants of inherent risk.…”
Section: Auditor's Responses On the Importance Of Variablessupporting
confidence: 92%
“…They documented evidence that liquidity problems, a history of errors and fraud, inventory levels, the strength of internal controls and whether the audit was associated with an initial public offering were factors influencing the assessment of inherent risk. Peters, Lewis & Dhar (1989) proposed a more disaggregated approach. They concluded that inherent risk assessments were usually generated on an account-byaccount basis; auditors hold expectations about account balances and investigate balances that differ from these expectations; auditors' expectations tend to be based on changes in events or circumstances relative to prior years; management's incentives and abilities to manipulate account balances are of special importance in assessing inherent risk; and to be useful, inherent risk assessment should provide an analysis of why a given account is risky rather than give a quantitative estimate of risk.…”
Section: Inherent Risk Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Auditing standards recognize the subjective nature of accounting estimates and that there is greater potential for uncertainty and bias in subjective estimates than in objective amounts involved in the accounting process (AICPA 1988). For instance, the likelihood that management could misstate an account balance increases as the degree of judgement (subjectivity) in determining the account balance increases (e.g., see Peters, Lewis, and Dhar 1989).…”
Section: Task Subjectivitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two approaches, knowledge-based (or expert systems) and procedural decision models, are applied to the problem and the results they generate are compared. Peters (1989), Bharadwaj et al (1994) and Delisio et al (1994) have selected a knowledge-based approach as the appropriate tool to model audit risk assessments of this type. An overview of these papers follows.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An overview of these papers follows. • Peters (1989) constructed an expert system to model the assessment of inherent risk during audit planning. He developed an initial model derived from several knowledge sources.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%