
@article{ref1,
title="4- to 15-year-old children's misinterpretation of invitations asking &quot;about the time&quot; as requests for temporal information in forensic interviews",
journal="Child abuse and neglect",
year="2022",
author="Friend, Owen W. and Henderson, Hayden M. and Lyon, Thomas D.",
volume="129",
number="",
pages="e105675-e105675",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Forensic interviewers are taught to ask children invitations using the word &quot;time&quot; to refer to a specific episode (e.g., &quot;Tell me about the last time he touched you.&quot;). However, children may interpret the word &quot;time&quot; as requesting conventional temporal information rather than narrative information. <br><br>OBJECTIVE: We examined the rates at which children misinterpreted invitations containing the word &quot;time,&quot; comparing invitations asking &quot;about&quot; an episode to invitations asking what &quot;happened&quot; during an episode. PARTICIPANTS: This study examined 827 forensic interviews of children aged 4 to 15 (M(age) = 8.1 years) in cases of suspected sexual abuse. <br><br>METHODS: We identified 1405 invitations using the word &quot;time,&quot; and coded them for whether they asked &quot;about&quot; or what &quot;happened.&quot; Children's responses were coded for whether they gave exclusively conventional temporal information, expressed temporal ignorance or uncertainty, requested clarification, or gave a don't know response. <br><br>RESULTS: Children responded to About invitations with higher rates of conventional temporal information (11%) than Happened invitations (6%, p < .001). Children were also more inclined to express uncertainty about temporal information when asked About invitations (p = .04). In a third of the cases where children exhibited misunderstanding, interviewers failed to clarify their intentions. <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: Forensic interviewers can reduce children's unresponsiveness to invitations by using Happened invitations that overcome the ambiguity associated with &quot;time.&quot;<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0145-2134",
doi="10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105675",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105675"
}