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Children's memory of events: effects of stress, age, time delay and location of interview

โœ Scribed by Sandra Shrimpton; Kim Oates; Susan Hayes


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
162 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0888-4080

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โœฆ Synopsis


To examine the ability of children aged between 4 and 12 years to recall a stressful event (venipuncture) compared with a non-stressful event (demonstration of venipuncture), recall was tested after 6ยฑ8 weeks. Half also had recall tested after 2ยฑ7 days. Testing took place where the stressful event occurred (n 122) or at a neutral location (n 127). Children who experienced the stressful event were less likely to give inaccurate responses in free recall or to acquiesce to suggestive misleading questions. Apart from incorrect responses in free recall, correct responses increased and incorrect responses decreased with increasing age. Recall after 2ยฑ7 days was superior to recall after 6ยฑ8 weeks. Those who had an early and a late interview had better recall at the late interview than those who had a late interview only. The location of interview showed no eects on recall.


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