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Forensic Psychology:: Psyc39 Lec 2 Notes

This document provides an overview of forensic psychology. It discusses that forensic psychology deals with human behavior as it relates to the legal system. A brief history is given, noting early researchers in the late 1800s/early 1900s. Several theories of crime are outlined, including biological, sociological, and psychological theories. The roles of a forensic psychologist as a clinician and researcher are described. Differences between psychology and law are contrasted. Criteria for accepting expert testimony in the USA and Canada are provided. Finally, the document discusses police psychology, including selection procedures and developing selection instruments.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
228 views

Forensic Psychology:: Psyc39 Lec 2 Notes

This document provides an overview of forensic psychology. It discusses that forensic psychology deals with human behavior as it relates to the legal system. A brief history is given, noting early researchers in the late 1800s/early 1900s. Several theories of crime are outlined, including biological, sociological, and psychological theories. The roles of a forensic psychologist as a clinician and researcher are described. Differences between psychology and law are contrasted. Criteria for accepting expert testimony in the USA and Canada are provided. Finally, the document discusses police psychology, including selection procedures and developing selection instruments.

Uploaded by

Sare Karam
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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PSYC39 LEC 2 NOTES

FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:
● Forensic Psychology: A field of psychology that deals with all aspects of human
behaviour as it relates to the law or legal system.
○ Forensic psychologists are interested in understanding the mechanisms that
underlie people’s thoughts, feelings, and actions - within a legal context.
○ Multiple terms are used, such as legal or criminological psychology.
○ Narrow Definition: Individuals engaged in clinical practice (i.e. assessing,
treating, or consulting) within the legal system.
○ Broader Definition (Bartol and Bartol): Psychological research related to legal
processes, and professional practice of psychology within or in consultation with
legal systems.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:


● James Cattell (1860-1944): The first professor of psychology in the U.S.
○ Completed PhD in 1886 under the supervision of Wilhelm Wundt in Germany.
○ Early research on eyewitness testimony (1895).
■ Asked university students to recall things they had witnessed in their daily
lives.
■ Found that student answers were inaccurate.
■ Students’ degree of confidence and recall accuracy was weak.
■ Cattell believed these findings could be useful in ‘courts of justice’.
● Hugo Munsterberg (1863-1916): The father of forensic psychology.
○ Completed PhD in 1885 under Wundt.
○ On the Witness Stand (1908):
■ Argued that psychology could assist the legal system through:
● Eyewitness testimony
● False confessions
● Crime prevention
■ Was ridiculed by legal scholars
● Fictional story in which he was tried by the “Supreme Court of
Wundt County” and found guilty of ‘claiming more than he could
offer’.
■ In wake of Munsterberg’s work, forensic psychology began to develop.
● Ex: Psychologists played an important role in the opening of the
first clinic for juvenile delinquents in 1909.
● Ex: By 1917, developed psychological tests for law enforcement
selection purposes.

THEORIES OF CRIME:
● Biological Theories:
○ Sheldon’s (1949) Constitutional Theory:
One’s temperament (reflected by body
type) increases his or her likelihood of
committing crime.
○ Jacob’s et al. (1965) Chromosomal
Theory: Chromosomal irregularity is
linked to criminal behavior.
■ Typical Females are XX; Typical
Males are XY.
■ Chromosomally atypical males with XYY (1/1000 male births)
● It was proposed that the extra Y chromosome in XYY makes
males more masculine.
● Jacob’s et al. reasoned that they would be more aggressive and
prone to violent crime → “violent super male”.
■ In fact, XYYs (a) do perform more antisocial and criminal behaviors; and
(b) are overrepresented in prison populations. But, they also have
● lower IQs
● lower income and education
● fewer social supports
● Sociological Theories:
○ Merton’s (1938) Strain Theory: Some low SES people use crime to compete for
status.
○ Sutherland’s (1939) Differential Association Theory: People are more likely to
get involved in crime when they learn values that are favorable to violations of
law.
● Psychological Theories:
○ Eysenck’s (1964) Biosocial Theory of Crime: People high in Extraversion and
Neuroticism don’t easily learn from the consequences of their behavior; aren’t
sufficiently socialized and develop antisocial inclinations.
○ Aker’s (1973) Social Learning Theory: Crime is learned; role models and the
expectations of rewards from crime leads to antisocial behavior.

THE ROLES OF A FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST:


● Clinician: Assessment and treatment of mental health issues as they pertain to the legal
system.
● Scientist: Experimenter or researcher; psychology as it relates to the legal system.
● Legal Scholar: Interdisciplinary training in both psychology and the law.

THE FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST AS A CLINICIAN:


● What do they do?
○ Conducting divorce and child custody mediation
○ Providing expert testimony on questions of a psychological nature
○ Personnel selection (e.g., for the police)
○ Treatment programs for offenders
● Educational Requirements:
○ Must hold a PhD in Psychology (ON, BC, QBC, PEI), Master’s degree is
sufficient in other provinces
○ Supervised practice in forensic setting
● Forensic Psychiatrists are medical doctors who work in forensic settings.

THE FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGIST AS A RESEARCHER:


● What do they do?
○ Examining the effectiveness of risk-assessment strategies
○ Determining what factors influence jury decision making
○ Evaluating programs (e.g., victim treatment)
○ Studying stress management interventions among police officers
● Educational Requirements:
○ Must hold a PhD in Psychology
○ Research focused on forensic psychology
○ No supervised practice, but may pursue postdoctoral training

EXPERT WITNESSES / EXPERT TESTIMONY


● Definition
○ A witness who provides the court with information that assists the court in
understanding an issue of relevance to a case.
○ Non-expert witnesses testify about what they have directly observed.
● Providing expert testimony is hard!
○ You have to be an expert in your field.
○ You have to know legal procedures.
○ You have to be an effective communicator (persuasive and helpful).

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PSYCHOLOGY AND LAW


● Epistemology:
○ Psychology: Objective Truth
○ Law: Subjective, most convincing story.
● Nature of Law:
○ Psychology: Descriptive—why do people behave the way they do?
○ Law: Prescriptive — people should behave this way.
● Knowledge:
○ Psychology: Knowledge is nomothetic or “general laws”.
○ Law: Knowledge is idiographic (case specific) analyses and reasoning.
● Methodology:
○ Psychology: Nomothetic, scientific method
○ Law: Case-by-case basis, develop compelling stories that cover details of a
specific case.
● Criterion:
○ Psychology: Statistical (e.g., Hypothesis testing, p < .05)
○ Law: Prescriptive—” Beyond reasonable doubt”
● Principles:
○ Psychology: Consider multiple, even competing explanations; explore
○ Law: Stick to available facts
● Latitude of Courtroom Behavior:
○ Psychology: Expert witness—strict protocol
○ Law: More options

CRITERIA FOR ACCEPTING EXPERT TESTIMONY IN U.S.A:


● In the United States, scientific evidence must meet the Daubert Criteria to be admitted
into court:
○ 1. The research has been peer reviewed.
○ 2. The research is testable (i.e., falsifiable).
○ 3. The research has a recognized rate of error.
○ 4. The research adheres to professional standards.

CRITERIA FOR ACCEPTING EXPERT TESTIMONY IN CANADA:


● In Canada, scientific evidence must meet the Mohan Criteria to be admitted:
○ 1. The evidence must be relevant.
○ 2. The evidence must be necessary for assisting the trier of fact.
○ 3. The evidence must not violate exclusionary rules.
■ Ex: Cannot cause prejudice jurors
○ 4. The evidence must be provided by a qualified expert.

POLICE PSYCHOLOGY:
● Police Selection:
○ Procedures to screen out undesirable candidates and select desirable ones.
● Police Discretion:
○ Latitude that officers have when making decisions.
● Police Stress:
○ Occupational stress and organizational stress.
● Psychology applied to selection procedures is, again, almost as old as psychology.
○ Lewis Terman (1917) used the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test to assist with
police selection in California
○ In France, Alfred Binet published the first intelligence test in 1905.
● The goal of selection procedures is to select the best candidates.

POLICE AGENCY SELECTION PROCEDURES IN THE U.S.:

Selection Procedure Percentage of Police Agencies

Background Checks 99.4%


Medical Exams 98.7%
Selection Interviews 98.1%
Personality Tests 91.6%
Physical Agility Tests 80.0%
Recommendation Letters 46.5%
Cognitive Ability (Intelligence) Tests 46.5%

DEVELOPING POLICE SELECTION INSTRUMENTS:


● Step 1: Conduct a Job Analysis:
○ Identify the particular knowledge, skills, and abilities that make a good police
officer → Not easy …KSAs depend on type of work!
■ Ex: KSAs of the ideal constable (officer) vs. ideal manager
○ Consensus: Honesty, reliability, sensitivity to others, good communication skills,
high motivation, problem-solving skills, being a team player.
○ The RCMP uses the Six Factor Personality Test.
● Step 2: Constructing and Validating Instruments:
○ Do scores on the test predict performance outcomes?
■ Ex: Do scores on the Six Factor Personality Test predict supervisor ratings
of performance, number of promotions, absenteeism?
○ Predictive Validity: Often measured with correlation coefficients, which
quantify how two variables are associated with each other (and it assumes a linear
relationship).

EXAMPLES OF REAL CORRELATIONS BETWEEN DIFFERENT VARIABLES:


Predictor & Criterion (Meyer et al., 2001): r

Aspirin & the reduced risk of death by heart attack .02


85 fewer heart attacks among 11,000 people (Rosenthal, 2000)

Smoking & lung cancer .08

Sex & weight .26

Psychotherapy & outcome .27

Viagra & improved sexual functioning .38

Past behavior & the prediction of future behavior .39

Sex & arm strength .55

Distance from equator & daily temperature .60

Conclusion: The modal effect size is between .10 and .30 for psychology as a
whole (including experimental investigations).
● Effect sizes in psychology are comparable to, and often larger than, those
found in medicine.

HEMPHILL (2003):
THE PREDICTIVE VALIDITY OF POLICE SELECTION INSTRUMENTS:
● Selection Interviews:
○ Semi-structured (set list of questions for all applicants).
○ Assess whether the applicant has KSAs for the job.
○ Not a whole lot of research supporting their validity.
■ Ex: Annell et al. (2015) found only partial support for predictive validity:
of 36 correlation coefficients, only 5 were significant; largest was r = .10.
○ But, these recruits already had two years of academy training, 6 months of field
training, and had already passed other assessment hurdles.
○ Problem: Restrictive Range
● Psychological Tests:
○ Cognitive ability (intelligence) tests are commonplace.
■ Ex: RCMP use the RCMP Police Aptitude Test → Composition,
comprehension, memory, judgement, observation, logic, computation
○ Hirsh et al. (1986) meta-analysis of 40 studies
■ r = .36, training success
■ r = .13, on-the-job performance
○ Aamodt (2004), more recent meta-analysis
■ r = .41, academy performance
■ r = .16, supervisor ratings of on-the-job performance
● Assessment Centres:
○ Sophisticated facilities in which the behavior of applicants can be observed by
multiple raters
■ Situation Test: Approximate real-world policing in simulated
environments.
■ Some evidence supports validity. Pynes and Bernardin (1992) found:
● r = .14 for training academy performance
● r = .20 for on-the-job performance

POLICE DISCRETION:
● The freedom that officers have for deciding what should be done in a given situation:
○ What street should I patrol?
○ Should I stop that vehicle for a traffic violation?
○ What level of force is required to achieve my objective?
○ Should I call an end to this investigation?
● Discretion is necessary because the job is too complicated, and resources are scarce.
○ Sheehan and Cordner (1989):
● Enforcing all the laws all the time would force police to be at the station
and in court all the time, not on the streets where they’re needed.
● Ex: Minor infractions like going 2 km/hr above the speed limit.
● Enforcing all the laws all the time would overwhelm the justice system.
● There are limited resources.
● Politicians pass some laws that aren’t intended to be strictly enforced.
● Politicians pass laws that are purposely vague, allowing for discretion.

DISCRETION WHEN DEALING WITH INDVS’ WHO HAVE MENTAL ILLNESS:


● The deinstitutionalization of individuals with mental illness has increased the likelihood
that police officers will come into contact with mentally ill people (Cotton & Coleman,
2008)
● Three Options:
○ Transport the individual to a psychiatric institution or hospital.
○ Arrest and take to jail.
○ Resolve the manner informally (e.g. see that family steps in to help).

VINCE LI EXAMPLE:

DISCRETION IN USE-OF-FORCE SITUATIONS:


● In some situations, officers need to use force to protect the public and themselves.
● They can use varying degrees of force to suppress a situation.
● Need to do their best to use the minimal amount that’s necessary.
● When officers use excessive force, they can be charged and convicted of crime.
○ Canadian study by Hall and Votova (2013):
■ Examined 3.5 million interactions and recorded that only 0.1% of all
interactions were use-of-force.
● Physical strikes (59.6%), taser (14.9%), pepper spray, etc.
RCMP’S INCIDENT MANAGEMENT/INTERVENTION MODEL:
● Promotes continuous risk assessment in constantly evolving situations
● Situational factors
○ Environmental conditions (lighting, location, hazards, etc.)
○ Subject characteristics (e.g., number, abilities, state of mind, etc.)
○ Tactical issues (number of subjects, abilities of subject, threats etc.)

USEFUL DEFINITIONS:
● First-Degree Murder:
○ A homicide that is both planned and deliberate (e.g., contract killings).
○ Automatic: Life-sentence, no possibility of parole (early release) for 25 years
● Second-Degree Murder:
○ A deliberate killing that is not planned (e.g., X and Y are having a disagreement;
things get out of hand; X impulsively kills Y).
○ Minimum: Life-sentence, no possibility of parole for 10 years.
● Attempted Murder:
○ Trying to cause the death of another person.
○ Maximum of life sentence; If firearm is used, 4, 5, or 7 years depending on prior
convictions.
● Manslaughter:
○ A homicide committed without intent, although there may have been intent to
cause harm.
○ No minimal sentence, except when committed with a firearm (minimum 4 years
in prison).

JAMES FORCILLO CASE:


● Sammy Yatin on a Toronto bus exposing himself and threatening others with a knife
● Officers arrived. Officer Forcillo asked for a taser, but one wasn’t available.
● Shot Yatin 3 times. Yatin fell to the ground. Forcillo shot another 6 rounds; claimed he
saw Yatin start to “renew his attack”.
○ Forcillo was charged found guilty of attempted murder.

POLICE STRESS:
● Occupational Stress: Stressors relating to the job itself (e.g. facing danger).
● Organizational Stress: Stressors relating to organizational issues (e.g., problems with
management, pressure).
● Highest-Ranked Stressors for Police in Ontario:
○ The feeling that different rules apply to different people
○ Feeling like you always have to prove yourself to the organization
○ Dealing with the court system
○ Shift work
○ Perceived pressure to volunteer time
● Consequences of Police Stress:
○ Health problems
■ Retired officers die younger than other city employees (Brandl & Smith)
■ Officers more likely to die of cancer (Violanti et al., 1986)
○ Psychological problems (e.g. PTSD)
○ Job Performance Problems
○ Different solutions to help officers manage stress are being used and investigated
for effectiveness

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