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Support and Rapport Research in Forensic Interviewing

Rapport: Little effect on children’s, adolescents’, and adults’ statement quantity, accuracy, and suggestibility

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Pages 268-285 | Received 09 May 2018, Accepted 06 Aug 2018, Published online: 02 Jan 2019

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Read on this site (5)

Ida Foster, Victoria Talwar & Angela Crossman. (2023) The role of rapport in eliciting children’s truthful reports. Applied Developmental Science 27:3, pages 221-237.
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Mohammed M. Ali, Sonja P. Brubacher, Stefanie J. Sharman & Martine B. Powell. (2022) Adult Mock Sexual Assault Witness Perceptions and Non-Verbal Behaviors Across Different Interview Frameworks. Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice 0:0, pages 1-27.
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Seungjin Lee & Juyoung Kim. (2021) Rapport quality in investigative interviews: effects on open-ended questions and free recall responses. Police Practice and Research 22:1, pages 996-1008.
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Bruna Calado, Henry Otgaar & Peter Muris. (2018) Are children better witnesses than adolescents? Developmental trends in different false memory paradigms. Journal of Child Custody 15:4, pages 330-348.
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Henry Otgaar & Mark L. Howe. (2018) When children’s testimonies are used as evidence: how children’s accounts may impact child custodial decisions. Journal of Child Custody 15:4, pages 263-267.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Rachel E. Dianiska, Emma Simpson & Jodi A. Quas. (2024) Rapport building with adolescents to enhance reporting and disclosure. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 238, pages 105799.
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Katherine Hoogesteyn, Brianna L. Verigin, Danielle Finnick & Ewout H. Meijer. (2023) Rapport‐building: Chat versus in‐person witness interviews. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 20:2, pages 162-178.
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Coral Dando, Donna A. Taylor, Alessandra Caso, Zacharia Nahouli & Charlotte Adam. (2022) Interviewing in virtual environments: Towards understanding the impact of rapport-building behaviours and retrieval context on eyewitness memory. Memory & Cognition 51:2, pages 404-421.
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David A. Neequaye & Erik Mac Giolla. (2022) The Use of the Term Rapport in the Investigative Interviewing Literature: A critical Examination of Definitions. Meta-Psychology 6.
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Beth H. Richardson & Robert A. Nash. (2021) ‘Rapport myopia’ in investigative interviews: Evidence from linguistic and subjective indicators of rapport. Legal and Criminological Psychology 27:1, pages 32-47.
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Nieves Pérez-Mata, Amparo Moreno, Margarita Diges & Miriam Peláez. (2022) How Chronological Age, Theory of Mind, and Yield are Interrelated to Memory and Suggestion in Young Children. The Spanish Journal of Psychology 25.
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Henry Otgaar, Corine de Ruiter, Nathanael Sumampouw, Brenda Erens & Peter Muris. (2020) Protecting Against Misinformation: Examining the Effect of Empirically Based Investigative Interviewing on Misinformation Reporting. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 36:4, pages 758-768.
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Zacharia Nahouli, Coral J. Dando, Jay-Marie Mackenzie & Andreas Aresti. (2021) Rapport building and witness memory: Actions may ‘speak’ louder than words. PLOS ONE 16:8, pages e0256084.
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Rolando N. Carol, Jenna M. Kieckhaefer, Joy Johnson, Jillian Peek & Nadja Schreiber Compo. (2021) Being a good witness: The roles of benevolence and working memory capacity in rapport’s effect on eyewitness memory. Journal of Applied Social Psychology 51:7, pages 730-745.
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Mark D. Snow, Davut Akca, Christina J. Connors, Quintan Crough & Joseph Eastwood. (2021) Finding the right fit: Mock victims' preferences for police interviewer characteristics. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 18:2, pages 129-141.
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Mikaela Magnusson, Malin Joleby, Emelie Ernberg, Lucy Akehurst, Julia Korkman & Sara Landström. (2020) Preschoolers’ true and false reports: Comparing effects of the Sequential Interview and NICHD protocol. Legal and Criminological Psychology 26:1, pages 83-102.
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Alena Nash, Nathan Ridout & Robert A. Nash. (2020) Facing away from the interviewer: Evidence of little benefit to eyewitnesses' memory performance. Applied Cognitive Psychology 34:6, pages 1310-1322.
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Nathalie Brackmann, Melanie Sauerland & Henry Otgaar. (2018) Developmental trends in lineup performance: Adolescents are more prone to innocent bystander misidentifications than children and adults. Memory & Cognition 47:3, pages 428-440.
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