The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions

The purpose of this dissertation was to analyze the susceptibility of capital budgeting decisions to bias. Based on the political nature of many of these decisions, attribute framing effects were analyzed in a capital budgeting decision context. Specifically, two independent variables were analyze...

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Main Author: Allport, Christopher Douglas
Other Authors: Accounting and Information Systems
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28153
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292005-165247/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-281532021-01-16T05:32:33Z The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions Allport, Christopher Douglas Accounting and Information Systems Nottingham, Quinton J. Brozovsky, John A. Moreno, Kimberly K. Bhattacharjee, Sudip Brown, Robert Capital Budgeting Information Ambiguity Evaluative Reactions Attribute Framing The purpose of this dissertation was to analyze the susceptibility of capital budgeting decisions to bias. Based on the political nature of many of these decisions, attribute framing effects were analyzed in a capital budgeting decision context. Specifically, two independent variables were analyzed: accounting data and attribute frames. This research proposed that attribute framing effects would be conditional on the nature of the accounting data being considered. When the accounting data elicited a positive or negative evaluative reaction, attribute frames were expected to be unobtrusive to capital budgeting decisions. However, when the accounting data was neutral, eliciting an ambiguous evaluative reaction, attribute frames were predicted to bias these decisions. An experiment was conducted that considered the issue across two types of capital budgeting decisions: accept/reject decisions (dichotomous decision) and strategic alliance judgments (monetary allocations). Experimental findings strongly support the predicted relationships. These results suggest that persuasive descriptions are not effective in capital budgeting contexts when accounting data provides a clear picture as to the investmentâ s future success; however, these tactics may be vitally important when accounting information is unclear about the investmentâ s future success. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:13:35Z 2014-03-14T20:13:35Z 2005-06-23 2005-06-29 2008-07-14 2005-07-14 Dissertation etd-06292005-165247 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28153 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292005-165247/ Dissertation_Final_II.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Capital Budgeting
Information Ambiguity
Evaluative Reactions
Attribute Framing
spellingShingle Capital Budgeting
Information Ambiguity
Evaluative Reactions
Attribute Framing
Allport, Christopher Douglas
The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
description The purpose of this dissertation was to analyze the susceptibility of capital budgeting decisions to bias. Based on the political nature of many of these decisions, attribute framing effects were analyzed in a capital budgeting decision context. Specifically, two independent variables were analyzed: accounting data and attribute frames. This research proposed that attribute framing effects would be conditional on the nature of the accounting data being considered. When the accounting data elicited a positive or negative evaluative reaction, attribute frames were expected to be unobtrusive to capital budgeting decisions. However, when the accounting data was neutral, eliciting an ambiguous evaluative reaction, attribute frames were predicted to bias these decisions. An experiment was conducted that considered the issue across two types of capital budgeting decisions: accept/reject decisions (dichotomous decision) and strategic alliance judgments (monetary allocations). Experimental findings strongly support the predicted relationships. These results suggest that persuasive descriptions are not effective in capital budgeting contexts when accounting data provides a clear picture as to the investmentâ s future success; however, these tactics may be vitally important when accounting information is unclear about the investmentâ s future success. === Ph. D.
author2 Accounting and Information Systems
author_facet Accounting and Information Systems
Allport, Christopher Douglas
author Allport, Christopher Douglas
author_sort Allport, Christopher Douglas
title The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
title_short The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
title_full The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
title_fullStr The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Evaluative Reactions to Attribute Frames and Accounting Data on Capital Budgeting Decisions
title_sort influence of evaluative reactions to attribute frames and accounting data on capital budgeting decisions
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28153
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292005-165247/
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