1. Children's Elaborated Responses to Yes-No Questions in Forensic Interviews About Sexual Abuse.
- Author
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Szojka, Zsofia A. and Lyon, Thomas D.
- Subjects
FORENSIC medicine ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims ,INTERVIEWING ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILD sexual abuse ,IMPLICIT bias ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Children tend to answer yes-no questions with unelaborated "yes" and "no" responses, but the types of details likely omitted from unelaborated answers have not been explored. This study examined 379 4- to 12-year-olds' answers to yes-no questions in forensic interviews about CSA (N = 11,187), focusing on age differences in elaborated responses. As expected, older children elaborated more frequently than younger children. Our novel categorization of elaboration types revealed that although there were no age differences in children's use of nominal corrections (correcting a label), or in emphatic negations (giving forceful denials), older children were more likely to give narrative elaborations (providing additional narrative information), wh-elaborations (answering implicit wh-questions), and qualified elaborations (avoiding potentially misleading implications of unelaborated "yes" and "no" responses). The results suggest that children's developing understanding of the implied meaning of questions and responses helps to explain age differences in elaborative responses to yes-no questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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