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The effects of a supportive learning culture and rank on professional skepticism in information search

Therese Grohnert1,2,3; Wim Gijselaers1,2,3; Roger Meuwissen1,2; Ken T. Trotman4

1 Maastricht School of Management · 2 Maastricht University · 3 Department of Education · 4 UNSW Sydney

Accounting, Organizations and Society 2025 open access

Auditors at all ranks should be skeptical when searching for information throughout audits. However, we lever domain learning theory from educational psychology to posit that their skepticism unlikely develops evenly across ranks, but rather depends on a supportive learning culture, a construct from the management literature. To test that perceived learning culture moderates the association between auditor rank and skeptical information search, we use a laboratory study with 166 Dutch auditors at a Big 4 firm and follow-up interviews with seven top leaders of that firm. A more supportive perceived learning culture is associated with more skeptical information search, but only in audit managers and partners - not in associates and seniors. Interviewees attribute this pattern to values acquired over time through socialization, role expectations, knowledge development, and wider task characteristics.

DOI
10.1016/j.aos.2025.101590
Volume
114
Pages
101590
Language
en
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