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  • How children talk about events: Implications for eliciting and analyzing eyewitness reports

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    Brubacher207351.pdf (23.74Mb)
    Author(s)
    Brubacher, Sonja P
    Peterson, Carole
    La Rooy, David
    Dickinson, Jason J
    Poole, Debra Ann
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Brubacher, Sonja
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Legal and social service professionals often question whether various features of young witnesses’ responses during interviews are characteristic of children's event reports or whether these features are concerning findings that reflect degraded memory, outside influence, or other phenomena. To assist helping professionals and researchers who collect data through interviews, we aggregated findings from child eyewitness studies and revisited transcript sets to construct fifteen principles that capture how children talk about events. These principles address children's earliest event narratives, how children report information ...
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    Legal and social service professionals often question whether various features of young witnesses’ responses during interviews are characteristic of children's event reports or whether these features are concerning findings that reflect degraded memory, outside influence, or other phenomena. To assist helping professionals and researchers who collect data through interviews, we aggregated findings from child eyewitness studies and revisited transcript sets to construct fifteen principles that capture how children talk about events. These principles address children's earliest event narratives, how children report information as interviews unfold and typical features of their narratives, threats to the accuracy of answers, the influence of interviewers’ language on children's styles of reporting, how testimonies compare across multiple interviews and multiple witnesses to the same event, and the structure of accurate and inaccurate reports. A summary table highlights the implications of these principles for interviewers and the decision-makers who analyze children's reports.
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    Journal Title
    Developmental Review
    Volume
    51
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dr.2018.12.003
    Copyright Statement
    © 2019 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
    Subject
    Psychology
    Cognitive and computational psychology
    Children
    Eyewitness memory
    Event reports
    Narrative structure
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/383922
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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