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Using AI to identify exogenous shocks and conduct archival accounting research

William A. Ciconte1; Andrea Rozario2; Oktay Urcan2

1 University of Kansas · 2 University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Review of Accounting Studies 2026 open access

We explore the capabilities and dangers of artificial intelligence (AI) usage in accounting research. We focus on mining U.S. securities regulations as an economic shock, testing the causal effect of these shocks on U.S. firms’ voluntary disclosure, and writing a complete academic paper, conditional upon finding statistically significant results. Overall, this research experiment demonstrates the capacity for AI to provide efficiencies in research. AI-generated papers are not ready to be submitted to top accounting journals, but they constitute a useful starting point for accounting researchers and using AI saves valuable time in identifying exogenous shocks that significantly affect an outcome of interest. When we repeat the same experiment to explore the causal effect of non-U.S. securities regulations on U.S. firms’ voluntary disclosure practices, AI writes many professional looking papers with spurious results and unsubstantiated economic arguments, highlighting the potential dangers of AI for accounting scholarship.

DOI
10.1007/s11142-026-09967-y
Language
en
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