Paper 3 - Forensic Approach - Cognitive Approach Flashcards
What did Kolhberg do which as a first?
He was the first to apply moral reasoning to criminal behaviour
What was the method of Kolhbergs experiment?
■ Method: 72 boys- 10, 13 and 16 years
Level 1: preconventional reasoning:
- An action is morally wrong if the person who commits it is punished as a result
- The right behaviour is the one that is in your best interest
Level 2: conventional reasoning:
- The right behaviour is the one that makes other people think positively about you
- It is important to obey laws and follow social conventions because they help society to function properly
Level 3: postconventional reasoning:
- The right course of action is the one that promotes the greatest good for all greatest number of people
- Actions are driven by abstract, universal principles of right and wrong, which do not depend on the situation
What were Kolhbergs results
Kohlberg found that criminals have a lower level of moral reasoning than others
His research suggests that criminal don’t progress from the pre conventional level of moral reasoning
And that non criminals tend to be in the post conventional moral reasoning
What are cognitive distortions?
Cognitive distortions are errors or biases in people’s informational processing characterised by irrational thinking
Distortions are a way of thinking so that reality has become twisted and what we perceive no longer represents what is actually true
The result is that a persons perception of events is wrong but they think it is accurate
What did Gibbs (1995) say?
In the case of criminal behaviour - these distortions lead to offenders denying or rationalising their behaviour
Which. Can be categorised in 2 different ways: Hostile attribution bias and Minimisation
What is hostile attribution bias?
The bias is that someone has a leaning to always the worst. In the case of criminals such negative interpretations can be linked to their agressive or violent behaviours
(as they think that someone is angry at their actions for no reason)
Describe the study about hostile attribution bias by Wegrzny (2017)
62 males and 30 violent criminals +15 with a history of sexual abuse in children and 17 normal men
They were shown 20 ambiguous faces (10 men and 10 female) and asked the ppt to rate the rear and anger in the faces
The Violent criminals showed to have a hostile attribution bias as they rated faces as angry more often than the controls did and the sexual assault criminals
Describe the study about hostile attribution bias by Schonberg and Justye (2014)
■ Method - Presented 55 violent offenders with images of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions and compared these results with a control group of non-offenders.
■ The faces showed angry, happy or fearful emotions in varying levels of intensity.
■ Findings - the violent offenders were more likely to perceive images as angry and hostile compared to the control group.
Describe Dodge and Frame (1982)
What is it in support of?
Hostile attribution bias
■ Method: children were read five stories in which same sex peers caused an act of instrumental aggression but intention is ambiguous.
■ neither clearly hostile nor clearly accidental
■ Children asked a series of questions about intent and retaliation and punishment
■ Findings: aggressive boys responses contained attributions of hostile intent
What may hostile attribution bias lead to in adolescents?
Over attribution of hostile intention of peers
Explain the study about hostile attribution bias in adolescent boys leading to over attribution of hostile intentions to peers?
■ Method: study 1: 81 aggressive kindergarten up to 5th grade boys matched with non-aggressive peers.
- Found that biased attributions were implicated as a direct precedent to aggressive responses
■ Study 2: 80 of the same aggressive boys assessed the role of selective attention to and recall of hostile social cues.
- Found that selective recall of hostile cues did lead to biased attributions but did not fully account for differences between the boys
What is minimisation?
A type of cognitive distortion where the consequences of your actions are downplayed/minimised so the offenders have reduced feelings of guilt
Explain studies into minimisation?
(Positive evaluation)
■ Barbaree (1991) among 26 incarcerate rapists, 54% denied they had committed an offence at all and 40% minimised the harm they had caused the victim.
■ Pollock and Hashmall (1991) – 35% of child molesters in their sample argued the crime they had committed was non- sexual and 36% claimed the victim had consented (86 offenders)
■ Together they found 21 distinct excuses for their behaviour
How many stages of Kohlenberg’s criteria is there?
6
Explain level 1 of Kohlenberg’s moral reasoning?
Level 1: Pre-conventional morality
Stage 1 punishment orientation:
Rules are obeyed to avoid punishment
Stage 2 instrumental orientation or personal gain:
Rules are obeyed for personal gain
Explain level 2 of Kohlberg’s moral reasoning?
Level 2 Conventional morality:
Stage 3 ‘good boy’ or ‘good girl’ orientation:
Rules are obeyed for approval
Stage 4 maintenance of the social order:
Rules are obeyed to maintain the social order
Explain level of Kohlberg’s moral reasoning
Level 3 Post-conventional morality:
Stage 5 morality of contract and individual rights
Rules are obeyed if they are impartial; democratic rules are challenged if they infringe on the rights of others
Stage 6 morality of conscience:
The individual establishes his or her own rules in accordance with a personal set of ethical principles
What are the positive evaluations of Kohlberg’s moral reasoning?
Supporting evidence
Further evidence
Individual differences
What are the negative evaluations of Kohlberg’s moral reasoning
Alternative theories
Kohlberg Vs Gilligan
Individual differences in moral reasoning
Explain piaget’s theory?
Piaget’s theory suggests that child-like (criminal) moral reasoning is self-centred and ego-centric which overrides empathy and a concern for the needs a but as children develop their. Schemas develop to accommodate and assimilate new information. If this doesn’t happen it leads to an unpleasant sensation of disequilibrium which we try to escape by risky behaviour