Stice, Han
BA, MAcc (Brigham Young University); PhD (Florida)
Assistant Professor
Contact Room 1011, 10/FCheng Yu Tung Building
12 Chak Cheung Street
Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong
+852 3943 1548
hanstice@cuhk.edu.hk
Biography
Prof. Han Stice is an Assistant Professor of Accounting at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in accounting from Brigham Young University (2011) and his PhD in accounting from the University of Florida (2016). His research is primarily focused on information use and transfer by and among market participants. He has presented at a number of conferences and has had work published in one of the top accounting journals. He has experience teaching financial and managerial accounting as well as auditing. Prof. Stice comes from a family of accountants and has collaborated with various members of his family on a wide array of accounting projects.
Teaching Area
Managerial Accounting
Research Interests
Capital Markets
Information
Big Data
Media
Accounting
- Publications & Working Papers
- Stice, D., E. Stice, H. Stice, L. Stice-Lawrence (2022), “The Power of Numbers: Base-ten Threshold Effects in Reported Revenue,” Contemporary Accounting Research, forthcoming.
- Stice, D., H. Stice, R. White (2022), “Opening the Black Box of Audit Quality: The Effect of Individual Auditor Quality on Audit Outcomes,” Managerial Auditing Journal (Online).
- Impink, J., P. Kielty, H. Stice, R. White (2020), “Violent Video Games and Crime,” Journal of Media Economics, 33(3-4), 49-73.
- Min Kim, Derrald Stice, Han Stice, and Roger M. White (2021), “Stop the Presses! Or Wait, We Might Need Them: Firm Responses to Local newspaper Closures and Layoffs,” Journal of Corporate Finance, 69, 102035.
- Minkwan Ahn, Michael Drake, Hangsoo Kyung, and Han Stice (2019), “The Role of the Business Press in the Pricing of Analysts’ Recommendation Revisions,” Review of Accounting Studies, 24(1), 341-392.
- N. Brown, H. Stice, and R. White (2015), “Mobile communication and local information flow: Evidence from distracted driving laws,” Journal of Accounting Research, 53(2), 275-329.