The Believability of Children and Their Interviewers' Hearsay Testimony: When Less Is More

Hearsay testimony from children's interviewers is increasingly common in sexual abuse trials, but little is known about its effects on juries. In 2 studies, the authors examined college students' perceptions of 3 types of hearsay testimony (an actual interview with a child or an adult inte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied psychology 2002-10, Vol.87 (5), p.846-857
Hauptverfasser: Warren, Amye R, Nunez, Narina, Keeney, Jennifer M, Buck, Julie A, Smith, Beverly
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container_issue 5
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container_title Journal of applied psychology
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creator Warren, Amye R
Nunez, Narina
Keeney, Jennifer M
Buck, Julie A
Smith, Beverly
description Hearsay testimony from children's interviewers is increasingly common in sexual abuse trials, but little is known about its effects on juries. In 2 studies, the authors examined college students' perceptions of 3 types of hearsay testimony (an actual interview with a child or an adult interviewer providing either the gist of what that child had said or a verbatim account of the interview). Interviewers were rated as more accurate and truthful than the children. The interview was rated as higher quality, and children's statements, including their false statements, were sometimes rated as more believable in the interviewer gist hearsay condition. Mock jurors reacted differently to various types of hearsay testimony, and interviewer gist testimony may favor a child's case.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Attitude
Attitudes
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child Behavior
Child sexual abuse
Children
Children & youth
Courts
Credibility
Criminal trials
Evidence
Female
Forensic psychiatry
Hearsay
Human
Humans
Interview, Psychological
Interviews
Juries
Legal Evidence
Legal Testimony
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Mock juries
Perception
Perceptions
Psychology
Psychology, Child
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Sexual abuse
Statistical analysis
Studies
Suggestion
Surveys and Questionnaires
Testimony
USA
Videotape Recording
Witnesses
title The Believability of Children and Their Interviewers' Hearsay Testimony: When Less Is More
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