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Recent research on children’s testimony about experienced and witnessed events
Authors:Margaret-Ellen Pipe  Michael E Lamb  Yael Orbach  Phillip W Esplin
Institution:aNational Institute of Child Health and Human Development, USA;bDepartment of Social and Developmental Psychology, Cambridge University, Free School Lane, Cambridge CB2 3RQ, UK;cPrivate Practice, Phoenix, USA
Abstract:Research on memory development has increasingly moved out of the laboratory and into the real world. Whereas early researchers asked whether confusion and susceptibility to suggestion made children unreliable witnesses, furthermore, contemporary researchers are addressing a much broader range of questions about children’s memory, focusing not only on children’s frailties but also on their competencies. In this review, we emphasize work on factors that promote the retrieval and accurate recounting of experienced or witnessed events and the implications of these findings for forensic interview practices. Research shows that children are capable of providing accurate information about their experiences, although their ability to convey the information is affected not only by the qualities of their memories, but also by the types of retrieval mechanisms employed and the quality of the communication between them and their interlocutors. We thus discuss several characteristics of to-be-remembered events that affect memory and are relevant to children’s recall in applied settings; retrieval conditions and their effects on the amount and accuracy of the information that children report; and research on investigative interviews conducted in forensic contexts. Because many of the variables that influence memory are age-related, developmental changes in children’s ability to accurately report, and recount their experiences are highlighted.
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