“…That is, despite jurors' motivation to find auditors negligent for an alleged audit failure, convincing evidence indicating that the auditors exhibited an appropriate level of care can constrain jurors from finding the auditors blameworthy (e.g., Kadous 2000). Brown,Grenier,Pyzoha,Reffett,and Zielinski P2 In the case of an alleged audit failure pertaining to a complex management estimate, Brown et al (2019) use motivated reasoning theory to predict that the auditors' use of a specialist, either internal or external to the audit firm, would signal to jurors that the auditors exercised due professional care in auditing the estimate, thereby reducing jurors' auditor negligence assessments. Additionally, the study predicts that the litigation benefit provided by specialist use would depend on the level of management aggressiveness (i.e., potential bias) included in the estimate.…”