Comparing the effects of drawing and verbal recall techniques on children's memory accounts
Journal
Scandinavian Journal of Psychology
Journal Volume
59
Journal Issue
6
Pages
631-633
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Chang, T.-F.
Abstract
The present study compared the amount and accuracy of information Taiwanese children reported about a staged event in verbal-only and drawing-assisted interviews. We also tested further whether verbosity was a valid indicator of the accuracy of children's memory reports (Koriat & Goldsmith,) in a non-Western sample. Eighty-four first-grade elementary school children participated in a staged event involving a novel interactive puppet show followed by a drawing activity (drawing of the target event or the school), and were subsequently given a 10-minute memory interview. They were randomly assigned to a verbal cued-recall interview condition or a drawing-assisted interview condition. We did not find significant differences in the amount and accuracy of details reported between the two interview conditions. Our findings also revealed that the quantity of children's reports was positively related to the number of correct details reported, indicating that the children in our study did not demonstrate a quantity-accuracy tradeoff. ? 2018 Scandinavian Psychological Associations and John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Subjects
Children's memory; interviewing aids; investigative interviewing
SDGs
Other Subjects
association; child; female; human; interview; male; memory; physiology; preschool child; recall; Child; Child, Preschool; Cues; Female; Humans; Interviews as Topic; Male; Memory; Mental Recall
Type
journal article