Under Review
Neurofraud: A Literature Review and Theoretical Framework for Applying Neuroscience Tools to Fraud Research
Under Review at JFIA
A comprehensive literature review and methodological framework proposing how neuroscience tools (EEG, fMRI, eye-tracking, fNIRS, and physiological measures) can be applied to fraud research domains including fraudulent financial reporting, auditor judgment, investor responses, and perpetrator cognition.
Ongoing
Inertia, Deterrence, and Organizational Fraud: A Study on Behavioral Intentions in Commission Schemes
August
Examines how inertia moderates deterrent effects of punishment severity, certainty, and celerity on fraud behavioral intentions in commission-based compensation environments.
Ongoing
Rationalizing Non-Compliance: Analyzing Techniques of Neutralization, Self-Efficacy and Time Pressure in AI Policy Compliance
August
Finalizing for Submission
Neuro Study to Understand the Cognitive Load of Managerial Accounting Students Based on the Learning Method
Ongoing
Investigating the Impacts of Fraud Awareness Training on Intention to Commit Fraud
Ongoing
Investigating Auditor Behavioral Intentions using a Neuro-Headset
Working paper with student Patrick Burns using EEG technology to study auditor decision-making.
Ongoing
Does Corporate Social Responsibility Reduce Employee Theft?
August
Writing Results
Data Loss from Storage Device Failure: An Empirical Study of Protection Motivation
June
Ongoing
The Impact of Habit in Information Security Behaviors
August