Adult Judgments of Children's Veracity: The Role of Parenthood and Interpersonal Sensitivity

Date

2015

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Journal of Child and Adolescent Behaviour

Abstract

Background: Previous research has shown that parents perform better than non-parents in correctly identifying deception in children’s testimony. Objectives: To test the efficacy of different professionals in determining if a child is being truthful controlling for parental status. Methodology: In an experimental study 4 groups of participants, police officers (n=45), teachers (n=42), social workers (n=44), and early childhood studies students (n=47), judged the accuracy of children’s testimony in video recordings of 5 different children. Results: Parents, particularly female parents, performed consistently at better than chance levels in correctly classifying children. Ethnicity had a negligible impact on performance. In addition those who performed best scored significantly higher on interpersonal sensitivity, and within parents those who correctly classified children scored higher on family sensitivity. Conclusions: There appears to be something about the skills acquired as a parent in interacting with children that might usefully inform the training of those who have to make judgements about children’s veracity. (Author Abstract)

Description

Keywords

child witness, truthfulness, deception, credibility, research

Citation

Cassity, T. (2015). Adult Judgments of Children's Veracity: The Role of Parenthood and Interpersonal Sensitivity. Journal of Child and Adolescent Behaviour, 3(01). 6 p.

DOI