Karafan Journal

Karafan Journal

The impact of financial ratio reduction on supervised methods' ability to detect financial statement fraud

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 Department of Accounting, Zanjan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Zanjan, Iran.
2 Department. of Accounting, Zanjan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Zanjan, Iran.
3 Department of Computer Engineering, Ardabil Branch, Islamic Azad University, Ardabil, Iran.
Abstract
The capital market is built on information as the economy's primary engine. The system of financial statements of corporations, which is the most significant source of information used in the capital market, produces an information system called accounting. Fraud and manipulation in these financial statements raise corporate risk, erode investor confidence, and cast doubt on the objectivity of accounting experts. Owing to the significance of fraud, this study aims to offer a way to foretell the likelihood of fraud in the financial statements of businesses admitted to the Tehran Stock Exchange. According to the independent auditor's assessment, the existence of dormant assets and items, the doubting of the assumption of continuity of activity, the presence of tax discrepancies with other tax areas, and the dearth of adequate performance tax reserves led to the selection of the companies suspected of fraud. 96 financial ratios have been compiled by examining the theoretical foundations and the research done. In this research, the supervised methods of support vector machine, K-nearest neighbor, Bayesian network, neural network, decision tree, logistic regression, random forest and the hybrid method (bagging) have been used. The results of the research showed that the performance evaluation criteria of precision, accuracy, sensitivity, F- Measure, efficiency and the accuracy result of the confusion matrix in the bagging method were 72.45, 61.21, 64.74, 62.93, 73.50 and 72.45 percent, respectively, which indicates the better performance and greater ability of this method to predict the possibility of fraud in financial statements compared to other proposed methods.
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Volume 22, Special Issue
Humanities
Autumn 2025

  • Receive Date 30 April 2023
  • Revise Date 23 January 2024
  • Accept Date 05 April 2024