Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5039926 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2017 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Misinformation given to mothers can leak into children's later event reports.•The degree of interference varies as a function of maternal memory sharing style.•Children of mothers who provide high structure and control are especially prone to memory errors.•A high-structure and controlling approach mirrored a biased interviewing style in the suggestibility literature.

In this investigation, preschool-aged children experienced a staged event about which their mothers received misinformation suggesting that their children witnessed an activity that did not occur. Later, mothers were asked to talk about this event with their children. Consistent with previous research, mothers' provision of structure (defined as elaborative questions and statements) and degree of control (defined in terms of functional control of conversational turns) emerged as separate dimensions of maternal memory sharing style. When later interviewed by an unfamiliar examiner about the event, children whose mothers demonstrated both high structure and high control provided the highest levels of false reports of the activity suggested to mothers and generously embellished their accounts of this activity with nonoccurring details. In contrast, children with mothers who provided low structure, regardless of their degree of control, made few false reports and used sparse narrative detail. The implications of these findings for children's memory and suggestibility are discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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