
@article{ref1,
title="Child witnesses productively respond to &quot;how&quot; questions about evaluations but struggle with other &quot;how&quot; questions",
journal="Child maltreatment",
year="2023",
author="Henderson, Hayden and Sullivan, Colleen E. and Wylie, Breanne E. and Stolzenberg, Stacia N. and Evans, Angela D. and Lyon, Thomas D.",
volume="ePub",
number="ePub",
pages="ePub-ePub",
abstract="Child interviewers are often advised to avoid asking &quot;How&quot; questions, particularly with young children. However, children tend to answer &quot;How&quot; evaluative questions productively (e.g., &quot;How did you feel?&quot;). &quot;How&quot; evaluative questions are phrased as a &quot;How&quot; followed by an auxiliary verb (e.g., &quot;did&quot; or &quot;was&quot;), but so are &quot;How&quot; questions requesting information about method or manner (e.g., &quot;How did he touch you?&quot;), and &quot;How&quot; method/manner questions might be more difficult for children to answer. We examined 458 5- to 17-year-old children questioned about sexual abuse, identified 2485 &quot;How&quot; questions with an auxiliary verb, and classified them as &quot;How&quot; evaluative (n = 886) or &quot;How&quot; method/manner (n = 1599). Across age, children gave more productive answers to &quot;How&quot; evaluative questions than &quot;How&quot; method/manner questions. Although even young children responded appropriately to &quot;How&quot; method/manner questions over 80% of the time, specific types of &quot;How&quot; method/manner questions were particularly difficult, including questions regarding clothing, body positioning, and the nature of touch. Children's difficulties lie in specific combinations of &quot;How&quot; questions and topics, rather than &quot;How&quot; questions in general.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1077-5595",
doi="10.1177/10775595231175913",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10775595231175913"
}