Adults' interpretation of invitations using the word ‘time’

Author:

Wylie Breanne E.1ORCID,Merriwether Ella P.2ORCID,Olaguez Alma P.3ORCID,Lieber Miriam2ORCID,Klemfuss J. Zoe4ORCID,Lyon Thomas D.1ORCID,McWilliams Kelly2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Gould School of Law University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Psychology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center City University of New York New York New York USA

3. Department of Psychology California State University, Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

4. Department of Psychological Science University of California, Irvine Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractThe present study examined adults' interpretations of invitations using the word ‘time’. Recent research has demonstrated that children may misunderstand these invitations as solely requesting temporal information (Friend et al., 2022). This study tested whether adults perceive the ambiguity in these invitations and whether they understand the source of children's pseudotemporal errors. We examined 401 adult participants' perceptions of invitations using the word ‘time’, varying the phrasing of the invitation (about the time vs. what happened) and whether the participant had exposure to a child's pseudotemporal response. Adults largely interpreted the invitations as requests for what happened during an event, not requests for when an event occurred. They rated the invitations as clear, not difficult and appropriate for elementary‐aged children. However, they were more likely to rate about the time invitations as temporal compared to what happened invitations. Additionally, their perceptions of clarity and age appropriateness decreased when they were exposed to children's overtly pseudotemporal responses. These results suggest that although adults typically fail to identify the ambiguity in invitations using the word ‘time’, they are able to adjust their interpretation of the questions, at least when they are provided clear evidence of children's misinterpretation.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference16 articles.

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