
@article{ref1,
title="Is there touch in the game of Twister? The effects of innocuous touch and suggestive questions on children's eyewitness memory",
journal="Law and human behavior",
year="2003",
author="Krackow, Elisa and Lynn, Steven Jay",
volume="27",
number="6",
pages="589-604",
abstract="Preschool children (ages 48-70 months, N = 48) experienced 2 to-be-remembered events (i.e., the games Twister and Shapes) that included either innocuous bodily touch or no touch. Participants were interviewed 7 days later and asked direct (&quot;Did Amy kiss you?&quot;) or suggestive &quot;tag&quot; questions (&quot;Amy kissed you, didn't she?&quot;) equated for content. Results indicated that children who were innocuously touched were no more likely to falsely assent to &quot;abuse-related&quot; touch questions (e.g., &quot;Amy touched your bottom, didn't she?&quot;) than were children who were not touched. However, children who were asked tag questions responded at chance levels, thereby making high errors of commission in response to abuse-touch questions relative to their no-tag counterparts who responded to &quot;abuse questions&quot; accurately 93% of the time. Children who were asked tag questions assented at a higher rate to general forensic questions (&quot;Amy took your picture, didn't she?&quot;) than did children asked direct questions, and children assented at higher rates to &quot;abuse-touch&quot; questions than to general forensic questions. Results are discussed in terms of prior research on interviewing techniques and adult influence on children's testimony.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0147-7307",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}