ABSTRACT

Preschoolers can report memories of personal experience accurately in many circumstances (Fivush, 1997). However, the reality of foren­ sic interviewing practices is that individuals must often provide eye­ witness accounts after others have suggested inaccurate information (e.g., Ceci & Bruck, 1995). These suggestions seem to reduce the accu­ racy of preschoolers’ reports more than the reports of older children and adults. For example, 3-and 4-year-olds acquiesce immediately to an interviewer’s suggestions more often than older children do (Good­ man, Quas, Batterman-Faunce, Riddlesberger, & Kuhn, 1994; Good­ man, Rudy, Bottoms, & Aman, 1990; for a review, see Ceci & Bruck, 1993). In addition, research on misinformation effects shows that the reports of both adults and children are typically less accurate for de­ tails when they are misled than when they are not (Ceci, Ross, & Toglia, 1987; Loftus, Hoffman, & Wagenaar, 1992; Loftus, Miller & Burns, 1978; McCloskey & Zaragoza, 1985; Toglia, Ross, Ceci, & Hembrooke 1992; Zaragoza, McCloskey, & Jarnis, 1987); however, this effect is especially strong for 3-and 4-year-olds (Ceci et al., 1987; Toglia etal., 1992, but see Zaragoza, Dahlgren, & Muench, 1992, for a failure to replicate).