Sebastian, who joined Gies this fall as an assistant professor of accountancy, is one of a small number of scholars who apply market-based experimental economics methods to financial accounting.

Sebastian
Stirnkorb is no stranger to the University of Illinois. His five months as a visiting scholar at
Gies College of Business during his PhD at Erasmus University’s Rotterdam
School of Management made a lasting impression on him. The atmosphere was
grounded, collaborative, and ambitious without pretense. Years later, when a
faculty position opened, coming to Gies Business was a natural choice.
"I
had already worked with a number of Gies faculty, and I've spent time in
Urbana-Champaign,” Sebastian said. “The opportunity to come back was one I
couldn’t pass up. I’m excited to join a community I already know is so grounded,
respectful, and hardworking."
That
fit is paired with a rare and precise research identity. Sebastian, who joined
Gies this fall as an assistant professor of accountancy, is one of a small
number of scholars who apply market-based experimental economics methods to
financial accounting, which allows him to study market behavior in a way most
accountancy researchers can't. His approach is designed to capture how
information is aggregated, anticipated, and acted upon in real trading.
"In
the real world, there's so much we can't observe," he said,
"especially when it comes to retail investors. My methodology lets me
observe strategic interactions, like how people aggregate and use information,
or anticipate others' behavior. Or how all of that is reflected in
trading."
That
approach fuels projects with relevance beyond experimental economics. A recent
research paper coauthored with Gies Business Executive Associate Dean of Faculty and Research Mark Peecher, accountancy PhD student Isaac Yamoah and Christian
Pietsch (Erasmus University) found Sebastian examining how auditors respond to specialist
advice grounded in AI
- and how it might change their decisions.
"We
showed that when auditors see AI-augmented specialist advice, they tend to
discount it," Sebastian said.
The
team traced this to a kind of aversion – seeing human advice supported by machine-generated
advice as a “black box” and potential threat to professional expertise.
“The
interesting thing is we observed that the effect actually disappeared when we
invited the auditors to reflect on their strongest personal skill. Just
thinking about what they're good at made them less defensive. We're offering a
solution to audit firms that they can explore further."
The
collaborative academic culture at Gies Business impacted Sebastian's trajectory
long before he joined the faculty ranks. Working in a specialized experimental
field can be isolating. For Sebastian, Gies is more than a job - it's a
community, a network of inspiration. He credits parts of his development as a
researcher to colleagues and coauthors like Mark Peecher and Jessen Hobson, who
made collaboration a priority.
"I've
learned a lot and I'm very thankful for what I learned from Jessen and
Mark," he explained. "Despite their responsibilities, they always
found time to give thoughtful feedback. I'm really looking forward to giving
something back."
For
Sebastian, Jessen Hobson was more than a collaborator, he was an influential
mentor and friend. Hobson, who passed away in 2023, was known across Gies for
his generosity with time, enthusiasm for innovation, and ability to inspire
colleagues to push their research in new directions. For Sebastian, those
conversations were encouragement in a small field, and a reminder that
collaboration can be both productive and encouraging.
"As
an experimentalist in financial accounting, you're already in a small
niche," he said. "Then, even
further, I chose experimental economics methodology. So being able to talk to
Jessen was very motivating. Finding others who care about these questions meant
a lot."
It's
the kind of approach he wants to carry forward as he works with Gies PhD students - understanding
the potential impact of a short, thoughtful conversation.
Looking
forward, he's eager to explore the world of ESG reporting, where non-financial
disclosures are reshaping what investors and auditors need to know to serve
clients. ESG disclosures are different from traditional financial statements:
fragmented, sometimes voluntary, with metrics that don't necessarily connect in
predictable ways. For Sebastian, that complexity is exactly why an experimental
lens can be helpful.
"I'm
looking forward to exploring research connected to ESG reporting. I find it
fascinating because I think it changes everything we know. And it's not
necessarily interrelated the way financial information is. We're at the
beginning of understanding how auditors determine materiality. How do they
assess risks in that area?"
This
fall, Sebastian will teach ACCY 405:
Assurance & Attestation, a class he sees as fundamentally connected to the
idea of building trust in markets and society.
"I'm
very much looking forward to teaching again," Sebastian continued.
"I've taught financial reporting, from introductory to advanced courses,
and I'm excited to teach assurance and attestation. Because it's really about
trust. How do we instill trust in society? How can we make sure investors can
trust reported information? Given the times we're living in, that seems very
useful."
That
same instinct motivates his scholarship - looking closely at how information
flows, how people respond, and how trust is built in the systems that connect
them.