Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Age‐related Differences in the Free‐recall Accounts of Child, Adolescent, and Adult Witnesses
View through CrossRef
SummaryMany researchers have examined the factors that affect children's ability to provide eyewitness evidence, leading to significant reform in policy and practice. In stark contrast, there has been virtually no eyewitness research conducted with adolescents, even though adolescents are still undergoing developmental changes that are likely to affect eyewitness performance. We compared the eyewitness performance of children, adolescents, and adults by showing them a brief film clip depicting a simulated crime and using cognitive interview instructions to elicit free‐recall accounts. Adolescents provided more information than children, but less information than adults. Accuracy did not differ with age. These data suggest that, like children, adolescents could benefit from specialised interview techniques that help them provide more complete accounts. Across all three age groups, individual differences in cognitive functioning contributed to variation in eyewitness performance, and eliciting a second free‐recall account increased the amount of information reported. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Title: Age‐related Differences in the Free‐recall Accounts of Child, Adolescent, and Adult Witnesses
Description:
SummaryMany researchers have examined the factors that affect children's ability to provide eyewitness evidence, leading to significant reform in policy and practice.
In stark contrast, there has been virtually no eyewitness research conducted with adolescents, even though adolescents are still undergoing developmental changes that are likely to affect eyewitness performance.
We compared the eyewitness performance of children, adolescents, and adults by showing them a brief film clip depicting a simulated crime and using cognitive interview instructions to elicit free‐recall accounts.
Adolescents provided more information than children, but less information than adults.
Accuracy did not differ with age.
These data suggest that, like children, adolescents could benefit from specialised interview techniques that help them provide more complete accounts.
Across all three age groups, individual differences in cognitive functioning contributed to variation in eyewitness performance, and eliciting a second free‐recall account increased the amount of information reported.
Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Related Results
THE ‘PARENT’ IN THE PARENTING STYLE:
A CORRELATIONAL STUDY EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF PARENTING ON SELF-CONCEPT OF THE ADOLESCENT (Preprint)
THE ‘PARENT’ IN THE PARENTING STYLE:
A CORRELATIONAL STUDY EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF PARENTING ON SELF-CONCEPT OF THE ADOLESCENT (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
The present research attempts to explore the dynamics of parent child relationship. The investigation aims at understanding the impact of parenti...
Alts and Automediality: Compartmentalising the Self through Multiple Social Media Profiles
Alts and Automediality: Compartmentalising the Self through Multiple Social Media Profiles
IntroductionAlt, or alternative, accounts are secondary profiles people use in addition to a main account on a social media platform. They are a kind of automediation, a way of rep...
Effectiveness and Problems of Implementation of Assistance for Witnesses
Effectiveness and Problems of Implementation of Assistance for Witnesses
Proof of a crime, the evidence that must be met is at least 2 pieces of evidence. Evidence that must be submitted in proving a crime is evidence in the form of witness statements. ...
Psychological Problems of the Adolescent: Part II
Psychological Problems of the Adolescent: Part II
It is not surprising that adults find adolescents challenging and irritating, bafflng and obvious, charming and crude, stimulating and dull, frustrating and gratifying. The normal ...
Examining Means of Reaching Adolescent Girls for Iron Supplementation in Tigray, Northern Ethiopia
Examining Means of Reaching Adolescent Girls for Iron Supplementation in Tigray, Northern Ethiopia
Background: Iron deficiency is the most prevalent nutritional deficiency in adolescent girls from the developing world. One of the recommended interventions to improve iron status ...
Hippocampal Engagement during Recall Depends on Memory Content
Hippocampal Engagement during Recall Depends on Memory Content
Summary
The hippocampus is considered pivotal to recall, allowing retrieval of information not available in the immediate environment. In contrast, neocortex is tho...
Delivering Adolescent Vaccinations in the Medical Home: A New Era?
Delivering Adolescent Vaccinations in the Medical Home: A New Era?
BACKGROUND. Medical homes are health care settings that offer continuous, comprehensive, accessible primary care; these settings generally involve pediatric and family physician pr...
Feto-maternal Outcomes in Adolescent and Young Adult Primigravid Mothers in a Tertiary Care Hospital in Bangladesh
Feto-maternal Outcomes in Adolescent and Young Adult Primigravid Mothers in a Tertiary Care Hospital in Bangladesh
Introduction: Adolescent pregnancy is a worldwide common health problem bearing serious social and medical implications relating to maternal and child health. In Bangladesh, pregna...

