Title of article :
Monetary unit sampling: a belief-function implementation for audit and accounting applications Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Peter R. Gillett، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Audit procedures may be planned and audit evidence evaluated using monetary unit sampling (MUS) techniques within the context of the Dempster–Shafer theory of belief functions. This article shows: (1) how to determine an appropriate sample size for MUS in order to obtain a desired degree of belief that the upper bound for misstatements lies within a given interval; and (2) what level of belief in a specified interval is obtained given a sample result. The results are consistent with the view that a specified level of belief in an interval is semantically a stronger claim than the same numerical level of probability. The paper describes two variants of MUS in both probability and belief-function forms, emphasizing the systematic similarities and the numerical differences between the two frameworks. The results, based on the Poisson distribution, extend results already available for mean-per-unit variables sampling, and may readily be developed to give similar results for the binomial distribution.
Keywords :
Belief functions , Monetary unit sampling , Auditing
Journal title :
International Journal of Approximate Reasoning
Journal title :
International Journal of Approximate Reasoning