Literature DB >> 9071770

Children's memory for traumatic injury.

C Peterson1, M Bell.   

Abstract

Children between 2 and 13 years who suffered traumatic injury necessitating hospital emergency room treatment were recruited as subjects. They (and adult witnesses) were interviewed a few days and 6 months later, using free and probed recall, about both injury and hospital treatment. Children at all ages were able to provide considerable information about both stressful events, although the amount of detail increased with age. They also made few commission errors. Surprisingly, children's distress at time of injury did not affect the amount or accuracy of their recall of that event, whereas distress during hospital treatment did decrease recall. A tripartite classification into 3 categories of detail was used: central, peripheral--inside the emotional events, or peripheral--outside those events. Children's recall differed depending upon detail category. Implications for children's testimony are discussed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 9071770

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


  9 in total

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6.  Post-Traumatic Stress and Autobiographical Memory Accuracy in Young Children: Traumatic Events Versus Stressful and Pleasant Events.

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7.  Implicit Encouragement: Enhancing Youth Productivity when Recounting a Stressful Experience.

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8.  Motivation matters: differing effects of pre-goal and post-goal emotions on attention and memory.

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9.  Understanding violations of Gricean maxims in preschoolers and adults.

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  9 in total

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