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Match the scenario below with the audit standard(s) and the number within the standard . Some examples may have more than one standard that applies.
Audit standards:
-General #1, #2, or #3
-Field work #1, #2, or #3
-Reporting #1, #2, #3, or #4
SCENARIOS:
(a) Larry works for a CPA firm that has few supervisory auditors.
(b) Mary-Ellen becomes bored with auditing payroll, so she simply checks off the steps on a work program as being completed without doing the work.
(c) Bruce refuses to attend his firm's training sessions, attending a baseball game instead. He has another staff member sign him in and out.
(d) The audit firm runs out of time and thus stops collecting evidence despite worries that there might be errors in one account.
(e) The staff at a firm like the client, so they raise the materiality threshold beyond the limit generally set by the firm.
(f) The audit report states that GAAP was used in preparing the financial statements, even though the client deviated from GAAP in several material respects.
(g) The auditors withhold the audit report because they have not been paid.
(h) The auditors perform the tests of internal control as they perform the substantive tests in order to save the client money.
(i) The client changes accounting methods with respect to inventory, but failed to restate its financial statements for the prior periods. The auditors decided to let it go since they ran out of time.
(j) The auditors fail to audit the footnote disclosures provided by the client.
(k) The auditor is concerned that there are material errors he has not found and so refuses to issue an audit report.
Group Experimental Designs
Research designs that involve manipulating one or more independent variables to observe the effect on a dependent variable across different groups.
Single-Subject Designs
Single-subject designs are research methods that focus on understanding the effect of an intervention or treatment on a single participant or subject over time.
Randomized AB Design
A study design where participants are randomly assigned to a baseline condition (A) and an intervention (B) to assess the effect of the intervention while minimizing selection biases.
Factorial Analysis
A statistical method used to describe variability among observed variables in terms of fewer unobserved variables.
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