Abstract

This research investigated the contribution of automatic and intentional memory processes to suggestible responses in 5- and 9-year-old children. Children were presented with an event followed the next day by a postevent summary containing misleading suggestions that were either read to participants or were self-generated in response to semantic and perceptual cues. All children were then given both a standard test and a modified forced-choice recognition memory test under inclusion and exclusion instruction conditions. On the standard test, both age groups were suggestible with the magnitude of these effects greater in the inclusion condition. Children performed more poorly on misled-generated items compared to misled-read items in the inclusion condition, but the opposite was the case under exclusion instructions. On the modified test, only 5-year-old children were found to be suggestible. Process dissociation analyses revealed that both automatic and intentional processes influenced misinformation acceptance, but that suggestibility was predominantly due to automatic processes.

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