2020
DOI: 10.1177/1362361320909174
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Interviewing autistic adults: Adaptations to support recall in police, employment, and healthcare interviews

Abstract: Recalling specific past experiences is critical for most formal social interactions, including when being interviewed for employment, as a witness or defendant in the criminal justice system, or as a patient during a clinical consultation. Such interviews can be difficult for autistic adults under standard open questioning, yet applied research into effective methods to facilitate autistic adults’ recall is only recently beginning to emerge. The current study tested the efficacy of different prompting techniqu… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 91 publications
(128 reference statements)
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“…It is worth mentioning that participants in the current study also fed back that offering preparation time by providing the questions in advance of the interview would be another helpful adaptation (see also Norris et al, 2020 ). For the purposes of the present study, it was felt that this would reduce experimental control, making it difficult to disentangle whether the adaptations to the questions per se were effective.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is worth mentioning that participants in the current study also fed back that offering preparation time by providing the questions in advance of the interview would be another helpful adaptation (see also Norris et al, 2020 ). For the purposes of the present study, it was felt that this would reduce experimental control, making it difficult to disentangle whether the adaptations to the questions per se were effective.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More structured questioning appears to have a twofold benefit in (1) providing support for executive functions and cognitive processes such as relational processing in memory retrieval while also (2) supporting social cognition by diminishing ambiguity about what is required from their response. More explicit and cued questioning has been shown to be helpful for autistic adults in applied contexts such as the Criminal Justice System (see Maras, in press ), but remains to be fully tested in the context of employment interviews (see Norris et al, 2020 ).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Recall specificity in police, healthcare, and employment interviews. Norris et al (2020) tested the effectiveness of three levels of questioning support on the specificity and relevance of interviewees' episodic ABM recall. In total, 30 autistic and 30 TD participants were asked a series of questions about personally experienced events that could be relevant to interviews in police (e.g.…”
Section: Overview Of Original Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The explicit use of support (such as using specific questions and detailed instructions) has also recently been shown to reduce inaccurate and improve accurate reporting (Almeida et al, 2019;Maras et al, 2013Maras et al, , 2020Mattison et al, 2015Mattison et al, , 2018, improve recall specificity (i.e. of specific events with rich contextual detail), and relevance (Norris et al, 2020), and improve the quality of autistic adults' responses in employment interviews (Maras et al, 2021).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Some studies have examined interviews of adults with ID and autism in an experimental setting. However, very few studies have analysed real-life investigative interviews with these groups (Gudjonsson et al 2000;Ternes and Yuille 2008;Maras and Bowler 2014;Hershkowitz 2018;Norris et al 2020). The current study adds to the research field by analysing how investigative interviews of adults and children with ID and autism are performed.…”
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confidence: 99%