2020
DOI: 10.1002/acp.3763
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When a different perspective and contextual knowledge change the conclusions: Commentary on Baugerud et al. (2020)

Abstract: Summary In this commentary, we raise concerns about potential methodological shortcomings in a recent paper by Baugerud et al. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020, 34, 654–663, which threaten the validity and the interpretative power of the original authors' conclusions. Our concerns relate to (a) the use of a scoring system that fails to account for how children's legal rights have been implemented in the Norwegian legal system; (b) the failure to acknowledge the legal and ethical rationales behind the use of … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(11 citation statements)
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“…1.2 | Lack of information about the use of facilitators and adherence to the SI model Melinder, Magnusson, Ask, et al (2020) objected to our conclusion that adoption of the SI model has not presaged improvements in the quality of questioning employed by forensic interviewers, claiming that we both misunderstood the principles underlying the model and had categorized questions and utterances arbitrarily and inappropriately. These objections lack merit.…”
Section: Melinder and Collaborators' Allegationsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…1.2 | Lack of information about the use of facilitators and adherence to the SI model Melinder, Magnusson, Ask, et al (2020) objected to our conclusion that adoption of the SI model has not presaged improvements in the quality of questioning employed by forensic interviewers, claiming that we both misunderstood the principles underlying the model and had categorized questions and utterances arbitrarily and inappropriately. These objections lack merit.…”
Section: Melinder and Collaborators' Allegationsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Melinder, Magnusson, Ask, et al (2020) then go one step further. Not only did they assume the existence of certain interviewer utterances but also incorrectly asserted how those utterances had been miscoded, claiming: “Consequently, the context of how interviewers introduce the topic was not considered and the aforementioned important ethical practices were scored as suggestive information/questions.” (p. 2).…”
Section: Melinder and Collaborators' Allegationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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