ABSTRACT

Children learn a great deal from other people, including history, science and religion, as well as language itself. Although our informants are usually well-intentioned, they can be wrong, and sometimes people deceive deliberately.  As soon as children can learn from what others tell them, they need to be able to evaluate the likely truth of such testimony. This book is the first of its kind to provide an overview of the field of testimony research, summarizing and discussing the latest findings into how children make such evaluations – when do they trust what people tell them, and when are they skeptical?

The nine chapters are organized according to the extent to which testimony is necessary for children to learn the matter in question – from cases where children are entirely dependent on the testimony of others, to cases where testimony is merely a convenient way of learning. Chapters also consider situations where reliance on testimony can lead a child astray, and the need for children to learn to be vigilant to deception, to ask questions appropriately, and to evaluate what they are told. With an international range of contributors, and two concluding commentaries which integrate the findings within a broader perspective of research on child development, the book provides a thorough overview of this emerging sub-field.

Trust and Skepticism will be essential reading for researchers, academic teachers and advanced students working in the areas of cognitive development and language development, and will also be of great interest to educationists concerned with nursery and primary education.

chapter 4|14 pages

Inquiring minds

Using questions to gather information from others

chapter 5|14 pages

Gullible's travel

How honest and trustful children become vigilant communicators

chapter 6|12 pages

Children's reasoning about deception

A cross-cultural perspective

chapter 9|15 pages

Trust in others' versions of experience

Implications for children's autobiographical memory

chapter 10|13 pages

Commentary I: Developing dimensions of deference

The cognitive and social underpinnings of trust in testimony and its development

chapter 11|12 pages

Commentary II: “If you've seen it before, then you know”

Physical evidence and children's trust in testimony