Chapter 5 - Factors Affecting the Reliability of Children’s Forensic Reports Flashcards

1
Q

Autobiographical memory
refers to…

A

memory about personally experienced events.

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2
Q

Being able to recall your date of birth is an example of…

A

Semantic autobiographical memory

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3
Q

Attending your graduation ceremony is an example of…

A

Episodic autobiographical memory

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4
Q

How can we differentiate autobiographical memory from episodic memory?

A
  • Memories most likely to be forgotten OR do not involve the ‘self’ = episodic memories
  • Meaning & significance of the event is important for AM
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5
Q

At what age do children show the ability to talk about past events?

A

By the age of 2, as children begin to develop stable self-concepts and the language of narrative

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6
Q

At the age of 2, children’s reports often require a great deal of…

A

adult prompting
EX. “Tell me what happened”

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7
Q

At what age are children able to provide more complete and elaborate accounts of past events?

A

By the age of 6
Ex. schooling & parent talk

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8
Q

What may compromise the accuracy of a child’s report?

A

if the child is interviewed about confusing events or events that contradict what they know

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9
Q

Briefly explain the experiment done by Kulkofsky, Wang & Ceci (2008)

A
  • had preschool-aged children engage in a pizza-baking activity that included a number of unusual, non-schematic elements (e.g., the pizza was baked in a refrigerator)
  • One week later, children’s free recall statements were 24% incorrect
  • Spontaneous statements are not completely error-free
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10
Q

What are scripts?

A

generalized accounts of what usually happens in a given situation

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11
Q

What is example of an adult script?

A
  • Going to a restaurant
  • Waiting to be seated
  • Ordering the food
  • Paying the bill
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12
Q

Why are young children are better at reporting scripts?

A

They find it difficult to distinguish between specific episodes of repeated events

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13
Q

Why might the frequent questioning of children in child abuse cases pose challenges for them in providing accurate and comprehensive explanations of specific incidents?

A

their dependence on scripts in such situations could make it more difficult for them to find accurate and comprehensive explanations of particular incidents

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14
Q

Briefly explain the study done by Simcock & Hayne (2002)

A
  • exposed children who were 27, 33, and 39 months old to a event and then tested their memories 6 months and 1 year later
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15
Q

What were the results from the Simcock & Hayne (2002) experiment?

A
  • no child used words to describe the event that had not been part of the child’s vocabulary at the time of the original event
  • results suggest that later verbal recall of an event is, in part, dependent on children’s language ability at the time of encoding
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16
Q

Briefly explain the study done by Peterson et al (1996)

A
  • examined children’s (2-13yo) LTM for ER visits
  • Interview immediately after visit to ER and then again either 6 months to 5 years later

Results:
- Preschoolers = fewer details than older children
- as young as 3-year-olds recalled some central information

17
Q

What is the definition of suggestibility?

A
  • the degree to which children’s encoding, storage, retrieval, and reporting of events can be influenced by a range of social and psychological factors
18
Q

Why are leading questions likely used with children?

A

their spontaneous reports provide very little detail about the specific event

19
Q

In general are children more accurate when answering direct questions or open-ended questions?

A

Children are less accurate when answering direct questions compared to open-ended questions

20
Q

What is interviewer bias?

A

interviewers who mold the interview to maximize disclosures consistent with their preconceived notions about what transpired.

21
Q

What are some suggestive techniques interviewer bias may be communicated through?

A
  1. Positive & negative reinforcement
    -ex. withholding benefits such as trips to the restroom for not disclosing
  2. Peer or parental pressure
    - telling the child that their classmates have already disclosed
  3. Negative emotional tone
    - urging the child to help keep the defendant in jail
  4. Generating stereotypes about the accused
    - referring to them as “bad person”
  5. Repeating questions
22
Q

Briefly describe the study done by Garven et al (2000)

A
  • children asked to recall details from when a visitor named “Paco” came to their classroom

Group A: Plausible events (“Did Paco break a toy”) AND fantastic events
(“Did Paco take you to a farm in a helicopter?”)
Results: agreed to 13% of plausible questions and 5% of fantastic questions

Group B: Same events & negative feedback to “no” responses AND positive to “yes”
Results: Falsely agreed to plausible items 35% and fantastic items 52%

23
Q

What is child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS)?

A
  • reluctant to disclose abuse because of motivational reasons such as
    being ashamed, scared, or embarrassed
  • abused children may delay abuse disclosure, deny abuse when asked, make partial disclosures, and retract abuse disclosures
24
Q

Is it a common for adults who have experienced CSA to disclose the incidents during their childhood?

A
  • Adults report they never told anyone during childhood about CSA
  • Few brought to attention of authorities
  • Support Summit’s notion of secrecy