Literature DB >> 15693756

Reconceptualizing children's suggestibility: bidirectional and temporal properties.

Livia L Gilstrap1, Stephen J Ceci.   

Abstract

Forty-one children (3 to 7 years) were exposed to a staged event and later interviewed by 1 of 41 professional interviewers. All interviews were coded with a detailed, mutually exclusive, and exhaustive coding scheme capturing adult behaviors (leading questions vs. neutral) and child behaviors (acquiescence vs. denial) in a temporally organized manner. Overall, interviewers' use of leading questions did not result in increased acquiescence as previously found. However, one specific type of leading question (i.e., inaccurate misleading) was followed by acquiescence. Lagged sequential analyses showed that it was possible to predict directly from child-to-child behavior, effectively skipping the intervening adult behavior. This result raises questions about the current conceptualization that suggestibility is driven by adult behaviors.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15693756     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2005.00828.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  5 in total

1.  "How did you feel?": increasing child sexual abuse witnesses' production of evaluative information.

Authors:  Thomas D Lyon; Nicholas Scurich; Karen Choi; Sally Handmaker; Rebecca Blank
Journal:  Law Hum Behav       Date:  2012-02-06

2.  Repeated questions, deception, and children's true and false reports of body touch.

Authors:  Jodi A Quas; Elizabeth L Davis; Gail S Goodman; John E B Myers
Journal:  Child Maltreat       Date:  2007-02

3.  Attorneys' Questions and Children's Productivity in Child Sexual Abuse Criminal Trials.

Authors:  J Zoe Klemfuss; Jodi A Quas; Thomas D Lyon
Journal:  Appl Cogn Psychol       Date:  2014 Sep-Oct

4.  Relations between Attorney Temporal Structure and Children's Response Productivity in Cases of Alleged Child Sexual Abuse.

Authors:  J Zoe Klemfuss; Kyndra C Cleveland; Jodi A Quas; Thomas D Lyon
Journal:  Legal Criminol Psychol       Date:  2016-07-05

5.  Preserving the Past: An Early Interview Improves Delayed Event Memory in Children With Intellectual Disabilities.

Authors:  Deirdre A Brown; Charlie N Lewis; Michael E Lamb
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2015-04-15
  5 in total

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