Week 12 Flashcards

1
Q

3 types of assessments in forensics

A

Forensic assessment instruments
Forensically relevant instruments
Clinical instruments

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2
Q

Forensic psychologists are involved in

A

Judicial decision making
Diagnosis
Prediction of risk

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3
Q

Law vs psychology

A

Law: zealous advocacy, seeks justice, adversarial system
Psychology: objective, seeks the truth, empiricism

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4
Q

Forensic psychologists assist the court with

A

Fitness to stand trial
Not guilty due to mental impairment
Custody evaluations
Bail recommendations

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5
Q

3 jurisdictions in Australia

A

Criminal: crimes against the public or the crown
Civil: conflicts between individuals or organisations
Family: conflicts within families or between partners

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6
Q

Fitness to stand trial assessments

A

MacArthur competence assessment tool

Structured clinical interview

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7
Q

Not guilty due to mental impairment assessments

A

Rogers criminal responsibility assessment scales (R-CRAS)

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8
Q

Custody evaluation assessments

A
Interviews with all involved parties
Personality testing 
Cognitive testing 
Demographic assessment 
Risk assessment
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9
Q

Risk assessment types

A

Structured clinical judgment

Actuarial

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10
Q

Structured clinical judgement

A

Clinical interview
Flexible, dynamic, informative for treatment and prevention
Subjective, inaccurate
Employs decision making models to remove some subjectivity

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11
Q

Actuarial

A

Uses formal rules, combine risk factors
Reliable, consistent, predictively valid
Transparent and accountable, important for expert testimony
Statistical method, finds most significant risk factor

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12
Q

2 categories of risk factors

A

Static: unchangeable
Dynamic: amenable, opportunity for intervention

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13
Q

Static 99 R

A

Male sex offenders

Static, 10 items

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14
Q

Psychopathy checklist revised

A

Static and dynamic
Actuarial but also requires structured clinical interview techniques and collateral information
Gold standard in recidivism and violence prediction
Normed for adult male and female offenders, and adult male forensic patients

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15
Q

Stalking risk profile

A

Assess and manage stalking risk

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16
Q

Risk for sexual violence protocol

A

Identified potential risk factors, relevance, risk formulation and management

17
Q

HCR-20 violence risk assessment

A

Historical
Clinical
Risk management

18
Q

Structured interview of reported symptoms (SIRS)

A

172 items one hour long

Specifically designed to uncover malingering

19
Q

Limitations of forensic assessment

A

Self report, malingering
Reliability and validity issues
Actuarial formulae have not been developed for many assessment instruments to interpret and predict behaviour
Small sample sizes have been used to validate some forensic psych instruments