Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness

This dissertation examined the effects of interruption on auditor efficiency and effectiveness for one simple and two complex tasks within the audit domain. I evaluated these effects for novice and experienced auditors. In addition, I considered two ways in which the negative effects of interruption...

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Main Author: Long, James Harvey
Other Authors: Accounting and Information Systems
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37514
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03292009-224506/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-375142020-10-23T06:29:48Z Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness Long, James Harvey Accounting and Information Systems Jenkins, James G. Fan, Weiguo Patrick Brinberg, David L. Song, Chang Joon Popova, Velina K. interruption audit efficiency mitigating interruption effects audit effectiveness This dissertation examined the effects of interruption on auditor efficiency and effectiveness for one simple and two complex tasks within the audit domain. I evaluated these effects for novice and experienced auditors. In addition, I considered two ways in which the negative effects of interruption might be mitigated: varying an individual's interruption response strategy (immediate vs. negotiated) and the presence or absence of a memory-aid (notes). I investigated these phenomena using an internet-based experimental instrument. Subjects included both students and practicing auditors. My findings indicate that interruption hindered performance on certain complex audit tasks, and that it differentially affected auditor performance at two levels of experience. When interrupted, inexperienced auditors completed complex audit tasks less efficiently; experienced auditors completed them less effectively. In addition, experienced auditors who negotiated interruption completed a complex audit task more efficiently and effectively than those that responded to the interruption immediately. Furthermore, note-taking increased experienced auditor task efficiency on a complex audit task requiring judgment. These results suggest that auditors should limit task interruption when they are engaged in complex audit tasks. When task interruption cannot be avoided, auditors should consider negotiating a delay in the onset of an interruption. Finally, auditors who are interrupted while they complete a complex task requiring judgment should consider using notes to mitigate the deleterious effect of interruption on task efficiency. Participants also completed a post-experimental questionnaire which provided evidence about interruptions in the audit environment. The responses confirmed that auditors are frequently interrupted in practice. In addition, auditors preferred differing interruption response strategies dependent upon both the level of primary task complexity (easy vs. difficult), and the medium through which the interruption occurred (electronic vs. interpersonal). They chose interruption response strategies according to their place in the social hierarchy relative to the interrupter (client/boss vs. subordinate /friends/family). Finally, I found that interruption influences affect. Auditors reported significantly more positive affect reactions to interruption on easy tasks (e.g., alert, cheerful, friendly, happy and relaxed) and substantially negative affect reactions to interruption on difficult tasks (e.g., angry, hostile, irritated, nervous and tense). Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:10:09Z 2014-03-14T21:10:09Z 2009-03-27 2009-03-29 2009-04-22 2009-04-22 Dissertation etd-03292009-224506 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37514 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03292009-224506/ IRBAmendmentApproval.pdf Dissertation-JamesHLong.pdf IRBInitialApproval.pdf CopyrightPermissions.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic interruption
audit efficiency
mitigating interruption effects
audit effectiveness
spellingShingle interruption
audit efficiency
mitigating interruption effects
audit effectiveness
Long, James Harvey
Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
description This dissertation examined the effects of interruption on auditor efficiency and effectiveness for one simple and two complex tasks within the audit domain. I evaluated these effects for novice and experienced auditors. In addition, I considered two ways in which the negative effects of interruption might be mitigated: varying an individual's interruption response strategy (immediate vs. negotiated) and the presence or absence of a memory-aid (notes). I investigated these phenomena using an internet-based experimental instrument. Subjects included both students and practicing auditors. My findings indicate that interruption hindered performance on certain complex audit tasks, and that it differentially affected auditor performance at two levels of experience. When interrupted, inexperienced auditors completed complex audit tasks less efficiently; experienced auditors completed them less effectively. In addition, experienced auditors who negotiated interruption completed a complex audit task more efficiently and effectively than those that responded to the interruption immediately. Furthermore, note-taking increased experienced auditor task efficiency on a complex audit task requiring judgment. These results suggest that auditors should limit task interruption when they are engaged in complex audit tasks. When task interruption cannot be avoided, auditors should consider negotiating a delay in the onset of an interruption. Finally, auditors who are interrupted while they complete a complex task requiring judgment should consider using notes to mitigate the deleterious effect of interruption on task efficiency. Participants also completed a post-experimental questionnaire which provided evidence about interruptions in the audit environment. The responses confirmed that auditors are frequently interrupted in practice. In addition, auditors preferred differing interruption response strategies dependent upon both the level of primary task complexity (easy vs. difficult), and the medium through which the interruption occurred (electronic vs. interpersonal). They chose interruption response strategies according to their place in the social hierarchy relative to the interrupter (client/boss vs. subordinate /friends/family). Finally, I found that interruption influences affect. Auditors reported significantly more positive affect reactions to interruption on easy tasks (e.g., alert, cheerful, friendly, happy and relaxed) and substantially negative affect reactions to interruption on difficult tasks (e.g., angry, hostile, irritated, nervous and tense). === Ph. D.
author2 Accounting and Information Systems
author_facet Accounting and Information Systems
Long, James Harvey
author Long, James Harvey
author_sort Long, James Harvey
title Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
title_short Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
title_full Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
title_fullStr Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Mitigating the Effects of Interruption on Audit Efficiency and Effectiveness
title_sort mitigating the effects of interruption on audit efficiency and effectiveness
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37514
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03292009-224506/
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