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Psychological Testing In Forensic Psychology

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Predicting recidivism based on idiosyncratic clinical judgment. Actuarial Prediction. Predicting recidivism by inputting information (usually stable, historical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychological Testing In Forensic Psychology


1
Psychological Testing In Forensic Psychology
  • Emily Cripps
  • Clinical Psychology Ph.D. Student,
  • University of Waterloo
  • Law and Mental Health Program,
  • Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

2
Forensic Clinical Practice
  • Criminal Assessments
  • Examples
  • Fitness to Stand Trial
  • Criminal Responsibility (NGRI)
  • Psychopathic Personality
  • Risk Assessment

3
Psychological Testing
  • Important Features of Psychological Tests
  • Standardized administration and scoring
    procedures
  • To ensure objectivity
  • Tests results are interpreted with respect to a
    normative sample, allowing us to rank a clients
    scores with respect to other scores within the
    standardization sample norming samples must be
    representative
  • Empirically established reliability and validity

4
Reliability
  • Reliability refers to the consistency of
    measurement
  • Types of Reliability
  • Test-Retest reliability
  • Consistency across different assessment points
  • Inter-rater reliability
  • Consistency across different raters

5
Validity
  • Validity is concerned with the accuracy of
    measurement
  • does the test measure what it is supposed to?
  • Types of Validity
  • Content Validity
  • Test items are a representative sample of the
    content areas you wish to assess
  • Predictive Validity
  • The test accurately predicts the behaviour in
    question

6
Tests of Psychopathology
  • Allow a clinician to assess a wider range of
    symptoms than in an interview
  • Allow for quantification of the severity of a
    problem
  • Have specifically defined clinical or diagnostic
    ranges scores within the clinical range are
    significantly higher or different than the mean
    of the standardization sample

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19
MMPI-2Validity Scales
  • Fake Good
  • Lie-Scale Assess the extent to which the test
    taker refuses to admit to a series common
    everyday problems or slight moral failings which
    statistically almost every one is willing to
    admit
  • Fake Bad
  • Assess the degree to which the test taker
    endorses a series of items which statistically
    are very rarely endorsed
  • These items are generally of the sort that
    legitimate patients dont endorse or only endorse
    in small numbers
  • Consistency
  • assess the extent to which the test taker
    responds to items of similar content in the same
    way

20
Risk Assessment
  • Clinical Prediction
  • Predicting recidivism based on idiosyncratic
    clinical judgment
  • Actuarial Prediction
  • Predicting recidivism by inputting information
    (usually stable, historical information) into
    statistical formulas derived from research
  • Actuarial method more effective than clinical
    method
  • Usually includes static variables (e.g., of
    previous offences, history of behavioural
    problems at school) newer measures incorporating
    dynamic/changeable variables (e.g., few social
    supports, employment difficulties, not perceiving
    oneself as at risk)

21
Phallometric Testing
  • Assesses assessing sexual interests, such as
    pedophilia
  • Measures changes in penile blood flow
  • Stimuli are auditory and/or visual stimuli
  • Auditory
  • Consensual and nonconsensual sexual encounters
  • Children, pubescents and adults
  • Visual
  • Children, pubescents and adults
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