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Adults' Memory for a Maltreatment-Related Childhood Experience: Interview Protocols

NCJ Number
307214
Journal
Clinical Psychological Science Volume: 11 Issue: 1 Dated: 2023 Pages: 164-182
Author(s)
Deborah Goldfarb; Gail S. Goodman; Yan Wang; Ronald P. Fisher; Daisy Vidales; Lauren C. Gonzalves; Yuerui Wu; Dana Hartman; Jianjian Qin; Mitchell L. Eisen
Date Published
2023
Length
19 pages
Annotation

This study assessed the accuracy of memories of adults who had experienced child maltreatment decades ago.

Abstract

Adults’ claims of decades-old child maltreatment raise questions about how to obtain accurate memories about childhood events. In this study, adults who experienced a documented child maltreatment medical examination when they were 3 to 16 years old (Time 1) were interviewed 2 decades later (Time 2). The adults (N = 115) were randomly assigned to one of three interview-protocol conditions: a standard forensic interview, the cognitive interview (CI) with mental reinstatement, or the CI with mental- and physical-context reinstatement. The CI increased accuracy by dampening reports of potentially schematic but nonexperienced information. Younger age at Time 1 was associated with memories that were less complete but not more inaccurate. A greater number of Time 2 posttraumatic-stress-disorder symptoms predicted both correct and incorrect (omissions and commissions, respectively) answers to specific questions and incorrect answers to misleading questions; commission errors were associated with Time 1 physical-abuse status. (Published Abstract Provided)