ACCT 321 CH. 11 QUESTIONS

Auditing involves the
A) collection, review, and documentation of audit evidence.
B) planning and verification of economic events.
C) collection of audit evidence and approval of economic events.
D) testing, documentation, and certification of audit evide

A) collection, review, and documentation of audit evidence.

What is not a typical responsibility of an internal auditor?
A) helping management to improve organizational effectiveness
B) assisting in the design and implementation of an AIS
C) preparation of the company's financial statements
D) implementing and mon

C) preparation of the company's financial statements

**Which type of work listed below is not typical of internal auditors?
A) operational and management audits
B) information system audits
C) financial statement audit
D) financial audit of accounting records

C) financial statement audit

The ________ audit examines the reliability and integrity of accounting records.
A) financial
B) informational
C) information systems
D) operational

A) financial

The ________ audit reviews the general and application controls of an AIS to assess its compliance with internal control policies and procedures and its effectiveness in safeguarding assets.
A) financial
B) information systems
C) management
D) internal co

B) information systems

**One type of audit that is concerned with the economical and efficient use of resources and the accomplishment of established goals and objectives is known as a(n) ________ audit.
A) financial
B) information systems
C) internal control
D) operational or

D) operational or management

**The ________ audit is concerned with the economical and efficient use of resources and the accomplishment of established goals and objectives.
A) financial
B) informational
C) information systems
D) operational

D) operational

**The purpose of ________ is to determine why, how, when, and who will perform the audit.
A) audit planning
B) the collection of audit evidence
C) the communication of audit results
D) the evaluation of audit evidence

A) audit planning

**Organizing the audit team and the physical examination of assets are components of which two separate audit stages?
A) planning; evaluating audit evidence
B) planning; collecting audit evidence
C) collecting audit evidence; communicating audit results
D

B) planning; collecting audit evidence

With which stage in the auditing process are the consideration of risk factors and materiality most associated?
A) audit planning
B) collection of audit evidence
C) communication of audit results
D) evaluation of audit evidence

A) audit planning

**A system that employs various types of advanced technology has more ________ risk than traditional batch processing.
A) control
B) detection
C) inherent
D) investing

C) inherent

Control risk is defined as the
A) susceptibility to material risk in the absence of controls.
B) risk that a material misstatement will get through the internal control structure and into the financial statements.
C) risk that auditors and their audit pro

B) risk that a material misstatement will get through the internal control structure and into the financial statements.

The possibility that a material error will occur even though auditors are following audit procedures and using good judgment is referred to as
A) control risk.
B) detection risk.
C) inherent risk.
D) investigating risk.

B) detection risk.

The ________ stage of the auditing process involves (among other things) the auditors observing the operating activities and having discussions with employees.
A) audit planning
B) collection of audit evidence
C) communication of audit results
D) evaluati

B) collection of audit evidence

**Verifying the accuracy of certain information, often through communication with third parties, is known as
A) reperformance.
B) confirmation.
C) substantiation.
D) documentation.

B) confirmation.

**The evidence collection method that examines all supporting documents to determine the validity of a transaction is called
A) review of documentation.
B) vouching.
C) physical examination.
D) analytical review.

B) vouching.

**The evidence collection method that considers the relationships and trends among information to detect items that should be investigated further is called
A) review of the documentation.
B) vouching.
C) physical examination.
D) analytical review.

D) analytical review.

**Assessing the quality of internal controls, the reliability of information, and operating performance are all part of which stage of the auditing process?
A) audit planning
B) collection of audit evidence
C) evaluation of audit evidence
D) communication

C) evaluation of audit evidence

An auditor must be willing to accept some degree of risk that the audit conclusion is incorrect. Accordingly, the auditor's objective is to seek ________ that no material error exists in the information audited.
A) absolute reliability
B) reasonable evide

C) reasonable assurance

**The risk-based audit approach is
A) a four-step approach to internal control evaluation.
B) a four-step approach to financial statement review and recommendations.
C) a three-step approach to internal control evaluation.
D) a three-step approach to fina

A) a four-step approach to internal control evaluation.

Which of the following is the first step in the risk-based audit approach?
A) Identify the control procedures that should be in place.
B) Evaluate the control procedures.
C) Determine the threats facing the AIS.
D) Evaluate weaknesses to determine their e

C) Determine the threats facing the AIS.

Determining whether the necessary control procedures are in place is accomplished by conducting
A) a systems overhaul.
B) a systems review.
C) tests of controls.
D) both B and C

B) a systems review.

According to the risk-based auditing approach, when a control deficiency is identified, the auditor should inquire about
A) tests of controls.
B) the feasibility of a systems review.
C) materiality and inherent risk factors.
D) compensating controls.

D) compensating controls.

The ________ to auditing provides auditors with a clear understanding of possible errors and irregularities and the related risks and exposures.
A) risk-based approach
B) risk-adjusted approach
C) financial audit approach
D) information systems approach

A) risk-based approach

What is the purpose of an information systems audit?
A) To determine the inherent risk factors found in the system
B) To review and evaluate the internal controls that protect the system
C) To examine the reliability and integrity of accounting records
D)

B) To review and evaluate the internal controls that protect the system

**The information systems audit objective that pertains to source data being processed into some form of output is known as
A) overall security.
B) program development.
C) program modifications.
D) processing.

D) processing.

To maintain the objectivity necessary for performing an independent evaluation function, auditors should not be involved in
A) making recommendations to management for improvement of existing internal controls.
B) examining system access logs.
C) examinin

D) developing the information system.

The auditor's role in systems development should be as
A) an advisor and developer of internal control specifications.
B) a developer of internal controls.
C) an independent reviewer only.
D) A and B above

C) an independent reviewer only.

Regarding program modifications, which statement below is incorrect?
A) Only material program changes should be thoroughly tested and documented.
B) When a program change is submitted for approval, a list of all required updates should be compiled and the

A) Only material program changes should be thoroughly tested and documented.

**How could auditors determine if unauthorized program changes have been made?
A) By interviewing and making inquiries of the programming staff
B) By examining the systems design and programming documentation
C) By using a source code comparison program
D

C) By using a source code comparison program

**Which auditing technique will not assist in determining if unauthorized programming changes have been made?
A) Use of a source code comparison program
B) Use of the reprocessing technique to compare program output
C) Interviewing and making inquiries of

C) Interviewing and making inquiries of the programming staff

32) Strong ________ controls can partially compensate for inadequate ________ controls.
A) development; processing
B) processing; development
C) operational; internal
D) internal; operational

B) processing; development

**The ________ procedure for auditing computer process controls uses a hypothetical series of valid and invalid transactions.
A) concurrent audit techniques
B) test data processing
C) integrated test facility
D) dual process

B) test data processing

**The auditor uses ________ to continuously monitor the system and collect audit evidence while live data are processed.
A) test data processing
B) parallel simulation
C) concurrent audit techniques
D) analysis of program logic

C) concurrent audit techniques

**Auditors have several techniques available to them to test computer-processing controls. An audit technique that immediately alerts auditors of suspicious transactions is known as
A) a SCARF.
B) an audit hook.
C) an audit sinker.
D) the snapshot techniq

B) an audit hook

**A type of software that auditors can use to analyze program logic and detect unexecuted program code is
A) a mapping program.
B) an audit log.
C) a scanning routine.
D) program tracing.

A) a mapping program.

**One tool used to document the review of source data controls is
A) a flowchart generator program.
B) a mapping program.
C) an input control matrix.
D) a program algorithm matrix.

C) an input control matrix.

An audit software program that generates programs that perform certain audit functions, based on auditor specifications, is referred to as a(n)
A) input controls matrix.
B) CAATS.
C) embedded audit module.
D) mapping program.

B) CAATS.

The use of a secure file library and restrictions on physical access to data files are control procedures used together to prevent
A) an employee or outsider obtaining data about an important client.
B) a data entry clerk from introducing data entry error

A) an employee or outsider obtaining data about an important client.

**An auditor might use which of the following to convert data from several sources into a single common format?
A) computer assisted audit techniques software
B) Windows Media Converter
C) concurrent audit technique
D) Adobe Professional

A) computer assisted audit techniques software

What is the primary purpose of computer audit software?
A) eliminate auditor judgment errors
B) assist the auditor in retrieving and reviewing information
C) detect unauthorized modifications to system program code
D) recheck all mathematical calculations

B) assist the auditor in retrieving and reviewing information

The scope of a(n) ________ audit encompasses all aspects of systems management.
A) operational
B) information systems
C) financial
D) internal control

A) operational

**Evaluating effectiveness, efficiency, and goal achievement are objectives of ________ audits.
A) financial
B) operational
C) information systems
D) all of the above

B) operational

In the ________ stage of an operational audit, the auditor measures the actual system against an ideal standard.
A) evidence collection
B) evidence evaluation
C) testing
D) internal control

B) evidence evaluation

An increase in the effectiveness of internal controls would have the greatest effect on
A) reducing control risk.
B) reducing detection risk.
C) reducing inherent risk.
D) reducing audit risk.

A) reducing control risk.

**An expansion of a firm's operations to include production in Russia and China will have the effect of
A) increasing inherent risk.
B) reducing inherent risk.
C) increasing control risk.
D) reducing control risk.

A) increasing inherent risk.

An increase in the effectiveness of auditing software will have the effect of
A) increasing detection risk.
B) reducing detection risk.
C) increasing control risk.
D) reducing control risk.

B) reducing detection risk.

**An auditor examines all documents related to the acquisition, history, repair and disposal of a firm's delivery van. This is an example of collecting audit evidence by
A) confirmation.
B) reperformance.
C) vouching.
D) analytical review.

C) vouching.

An auditor manually calculates accumulated depreciation on a delivery van and compares her calculation with accounting records. This is an example collecting audit evidence by
A) confirmation.
B) reperformance.
C) vouching.
D) analytical review.

B) reperformance.

An auditor finds that employee absentee rates are significantly higher on Mondays and Fridays than on other work days. This is an example collecting audit evidence by
A) confirmation.
B) reperformance.
C) vouching.
D) analytical review.

D) analytical review.

An auditor creates a fictitious customer in the system and then creates several fictitious sales to the customer. The records are then tracked as they are processed by the system. The auditor is using
A) an integrated test facility.
B) the snapshot techni

A) an integrated test facility.

An auditor sets an embedded audit module to flag all credit transactions in excess of $1,500. The flag causes the system state to be recorded before and after each transaction is processed. The auditor is using
A) an integrated test facility.
B) the snaps

B) the snapshot technique.

An auditor sets an embedded audit module to record all credit transactions in excess of $1,500 and store the data in an audit log. The auditor is using
A) the snapshot technique.
B) a system control audit review file.
C) audit hooks.
D) continuous and int

B) a system control audit review file.

An auditor sets an embedded audit module to flag questionable online transactions, display information about the transaction on the auditor's computer, and send a text message to the auditor's cell phone. The auditor is using
A) the snapshot technique.
B)

C) audit hooks.

An auditor sets an embedded audit module to selectively monitor transactions. Selected transactions are then reprocessed independently, and the results are compared with those obtained by the normal system processing. The auditor is using
A) an integrated

D) continuous and intermittent simulation

Which of the following is not one of the types of internal audits?
A) reviewing corporate organizational structure and reporting hierarchies
B) examining procedures for reporting and disposing of hazardous waste
C) reviewing source documents and general l

A) reviewing corporate organizational structure and reporting hierarchies

When programmers are working with program code, they often employ utilities that are also used in auditing. For example, as program code evolves, it is often the case that blocks of code are superseded by other blocks of code. Blocks of code that are not

C) mapping programs.

When programmers are working with program code, they often employ utilities that are also used in auditing. For example, as program code evolves, it is often the case that variables defined during the early part of development become irrelevant. The occur

B) scanning routines.