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The effect of intellectual disability on children's recall of an event across different question types

journal contribution
posted on 2004-06-01, 00:00 authored by Sarah Elizabeth Agnew, Martine Powell
This research examined the performance of 80 children aged 9–12 years with either a mild and moderate intellectual disability when recalling an innocuous event that was staged in their school. The children actively participated in a 30-min magic show, which included 21 specific target items. The first interview (held 3 days after the magic show) provided false and true biasing information about these 21 items. The second interview (held the following day) was designed to elicit the children's recall of the target details using the least number of specific prompts possible. The children's performance was compared with that of 2 control groups; a group of mainstream children matched for mental age and a group of mainstream children matched for chronological age. Overall, this study showed that children with either a mild or moderate intellectual disability can provide accurate and highly specific event-related information. However, their recall is less complete and less clear in response to free-narrative prompts and less accurate in response to specific questions when compared to both the mainstream age-matched groups. The implications of the findings for legal professionals and researchers are discussed.

History

Journal

Law and human behavior

Volume

28

Issue

3

Pagination

273 - 294

Publisher

Plenum Pub. Corp.

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

0147-7307

eISSN

1573-661X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, American Psychology-Law Society/Division 41 of the American Psychology Association

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