“…However, psychology research indicates that once evidence has been assimilated, the evidence and associated judgement are separately stored; thus, even if the evidence is later deemed erroneous, its judgement effects may linger on, and it is difficult for the decisionmaker to cognitively remove its influence (Ross, Lepper, and Hubbard 1975;Johnson and Seifert 1994;Seifert 2002). In an investment-decision setting, Master of Business Administration (MBA) students have been found to be susceptible to the influence of invalidated evidence despite the presence of a correction (Tan and Tan 2007). However, these prior studies use students as participants, and students' sensitivity to evidence validity is likely lower than that of auditors, whose professional duties involve assessing the validity of audit evidence (PCAOB 2003, AU 326;IAASB 2004, ISA 500).…”