Forensic Psychology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the top-down approach?

A

o Profilers start with a pre-established typology and work down in order to assign offenders to one of two categories based on witness accounts and evidence from the crime scene

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2
Q

Who uses the top-down approach and how was it created?

A

o American approach

o Created upon gathering data from in-depth interviews with 36 sexually motivated serial killers

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3
Q

What is an organised offender?

A

o Show evidence of having planned the crime in advance
o Victim will be deliberately targeted
o High degree of control during the crime
o Above average intelligence, socially and sexually competent
o Usually married

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4
Q

What is a disorganised offender?

A
o Little evidence of planning
o Offence may have been spontaneous 
o Body left at scene 
o Lower than average IQ 
o Unskilled, unemployed 
o Live alone
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5
Q

What are the four main stages in the construction of an FBI profile?

A

o Data assimilation - profiler reviews evidence
o Crime scene classification - organised or disorganised
o Crime reconstruction - hypotheses in terms of sequence of events. behaviour of the victim etc
o Profile generation - hypotheses related to the likely offender e.g demographic, background, physical characteristics etc

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6
Q

What is the bottom up approach?

A

o Profilers work up from evidence collected from the crime scene to develop hypothesis about the likely characteristics, motivations and social background of the offender

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7
Q

What is investigative psychology?

A

o Attempt to apply statistical procedures alongside psychological theory to analyse crime scene evidence
o Used in order to develop a data base which then acts as a baseline comparison
o Significance of time and place
o Bottom up approach

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8
Q

What is the marauder?

A

o Operates in close proximity to their home base

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9
Q

What is the commuter?

A

o Likely to have travelled a distance away from their usual residence

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10
Q

What is geographical profiling?

A

o Based on principle of spatial consistency, than an offender’s operational base and possible future offences are revealed by the geographical location of their previous crimes
o Bottom up approach

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11
Q

What is Eysneck’s general personality theory?

A

o Proposed that behaviour can be represented along two dimensions
o Introversion/extroversion
o Neuroticism/stability
o Later added a third dimension, psychoticism

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12
Q

What is the biological basis in Eysenck’s theory?

A

o All personality traits are biological and come from the type of nervous system we inherit
o Extroverts have an under-active nervous system which means they constantly feel excitement and stimulation
o Neurotic individuals tend to be nervous and over anxious and behaviour is often difficult to predict

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13
Q

What is the criminal personality?

A

Extroverted
Neurotic
Psychotic

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14
Q

What is the role of socialisation in Eysneck’s theory?

A

o Personality is linked to criminal behaviour via socialisation processes
o Concerned with immediate gratification, this is taught as a child if they’re not taught to delay gratification
o High E and N scores means they are difficult to condition and so worn;t learn to respond to antisocial impulses with anxiety

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15
Q

How is the criminal personality measured in Eysnecks theory?

A

o Eysneck personality inventory

o Form of psychological test which determines the personality type

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16
Q

What is level of moral reasoning in the cognitive approach?

A

o Refers to the process by which a individual draws upon their own value system to determine whether an action is right or wrong
o Kohlberg attempted to objectify this process by identifying the different levels of moral reasoning

17
Q

Where are criminal offenders and non-criminals likely to be classified on kohlbergs model?

A

o Pre-conventional level for criminals (immature)

o Conventional level and beyond for non-criminals

18
Q

What are cognitive distortions in the cognitive explanation?

A

o Faulty biased irrational ways of thinking that mean we perceive ourselves and other people and the world inaccurately and generally negatively

19
Q

What are two examples of cognitive distortions?

A

o Hostile attraction bias - the tendency to judge ambiguous situations, or the actions of others, as aggressive and/or threatening when in reality they may not be. Roots may like to childhood
o Minimalisation - a type of deception that involves downplaying the significance of an event or emotion. A common strategy when dealing with feelings of guilt.

20
Q

What is the scientific basis of the differential association theory?

A

o Scientific principles that explain types of offending
o Edwin Sutherland, his theory is designed to discriminate between individual s who become criminals and those who don’t, whatever their race or class

21
Q

How is crime learned behaviour?

A

o A person is socialised into a group with more pro-criminal attitudes then anti-criminal attitudes
o They will then go on to offend
o When in prison criminal would learn particular techniques for crime and be surrounded by pro-crime attitudes
o This explains why so many convicts go on to reoffend

22
Q

Inadequate superego as an explanation of offending

A

o Weak superego - same sex parent is absent during the phallic stage so child can’t internalise a fully formed super-ego as there is no opportunity for identification
o Deviant superego - same sex parent has immoral values
o Over-harsh superego - excessively punitive, crippled by guilt and so may unconsciously act out and perform criminal acts in order to satisfy superegos need for punishment

23
Q

What are the two psychodynamic explanations for offending?

A

o Inadequate superego

o Maternal deprivation

24
Q

Maternal deprivation as an explanation for offending

A

o Bowlby argued that ability to form meaningful relationships in adulthood was dependent upon the child forming a good relationship with a mother-figure
o Failure to establish bond can result in the personality type known as Affectionless Psychopathy

25
Q

What study was done on maternal deprivation and what were the findings?

A

o 44 juvenile thieves study
o Interviews and found that 14 out of sample could be identified as Affectionless psychopaths and 12 out of these had experienced prolonged separation from their mothers during infancy