Detecting children's lies: comparing true accounts about highly stressful injuries with unprepared, prepared, and coached lies |
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Authors: | Warren Kelly L Dodd Elyse Raynor Graham Peterson Carole |
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Affiliation: | Memorial University of Newfoundland. |
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Abstract: | In this investigation, 514 university students judged whether children were telling the truth about highly emotional events. Eight children (half female, half 8-9 and the remainder 12-14 years old) had been injured seriously enough to require emergency room treatment and were interviewed a few days later. Each was yoked to three other children matched in age and gender who fabricated accounts under one of three conditions: lies that were unprepared, prepared (24 hours to prepare), and coached by parents. Participants were at chance when judging true accounts as well as unprepared and prepared lies. However, 74% of the coached lies were judged as true. Participants' confidence in their judgments, age, experience with children, and relevant coursework/training did not improve judgments. |
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