Child maltreatment cases
often hinge on a child's word versus a defendant's word, making children's
disclosures crucially important. There is considerable debate concerning why
children recant allegations, and it is imperative to examine recantation
experimentally.
The purpose of this laboratory analogue investigation was to
test (a) how often children recant true allegations of an adult's wrongdoing
after disclosing and (b) whether children's age and caregiver supportiveness
predict recantation. During an interactive event, 6- to 9-year-olds witnessed
an experimenter break a puppet and were asked to keep the transgression a
secret. Children were then interviewed to elicit a disclosure of the
transgression. Mothers were randomly assigned to react supportively or
unsupportively to this disclosure, and children were interviewed again. We
coded children's recantations (explicit denials of the broken puppet after
disclosing) and changes in their forthcomingness (shifts from denial or claims
of lack of knowledge/memory to disclosure and vice versa) in free recall and in
response to focused questions about the transgression.
Overall, 23.3% of the children
recanted their prior disclosures (46% and 0% in the unsupportive and supportive
conditions, respectively). No age differences in recantation rates emerged, but
8- and 9-year-olds were more likely than 6- and 7-year-olds to maintain their
recantation throughout Interview 2. Children whose mothers reacted supportively
to disclosure became more forthcoming in Interview 2, and those whose mothers
reacted unsupportively became less forthcoming.
Results advance theoretical
understanding of how children disclose negative experiences, including
sociomotivational influences on their reports, and have practical implications
for the legal system.
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- 1Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA. Electronic address: lmalloy@fiu.edu.
- 2Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.
- J Exp Child Psychol. 2016 Jan 6;145:11-21. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2015.12.003.
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