It's been widely shown that children are particularly malleable as witnessed and are easily swayed to provide inaccurate narratives of events (while encoding false memories) through the power of suggestion.
There are established guidelines in place to minimize these risks, for example with question structure, interviewer tone/language, showing disapproval etc.
In their study, Brubacher & colleagues expanded this to see if there was an effect of familiarity with the interviewer. They found that the children recounted more details in their testimony when they were familiar with the interviewer.
This could lead to a better understanding of the best ways to work with children in forensic settings for all involved.
Citation: https://www.apa.org/pubs/highlights/spotlight/issue-159
This is such an important topic. The child needs to be in a psychologically safe environment and really be listened, not just asked standard questions. Thank you for sharing!
It is a good sharing to explain how to apply forensic psychology for whole population!
Informative and useful content
Great information! Forensic interviewing is so important, people get trained specially for interviewing children in order to get the most accurate info with least re-traumatizing.