Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Seriespage
- Titlepage
- Copyright
- Brife Contents
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Features
- About the Author
- Tour of the Book
- Digital Resources
- Preface
- Author’s Acknowledgements
- PART I:WHAT IS FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY?
- 1 What is Forensic Psychology?
- What is forensic psychology?
- Why do we need forensic psychology?
- Defining forensic psychology
- The origins of forensic psychology
- The roots of forensic psychology
- Psychological perspectives
- Applying psychological perspectives
- Thinking like a scientist
- The need for scientific reasoning
- Characteristics of scientific thinking
- Becoming better consumers of research
- Roles and responsibilities of a forensic psychologist
- The roles of the forensic psychologist
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- PART II:GETTING ACCURATE INFORMATION
- 2 Techniques for Interviewing Eyewitnesses
- Why are eyewitness reports so persuasive?
- How memories are made
- The reconstructive nature of memory
- Interviewing eyewitnesses (information generation)
- The standard interview
- Problems with the standard interview
- The cognitive interview
- The psychology behind the cognitive interview
- The seven phases of the cognitive interview
- Is the cognitive interview effective?
- Criticisms of the cognitive interview
- Is the live line-up dead? Improving eyewitness identification procedures
- Typical identification procedures
- System and estimator variables
- System variables
- Estimator variables
- The role of the forensic psychologist
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 3 Techniques for Interviewing Children
- Are children good witnesses?
- What does it mean to be a vulnerable witness?
- Exposure to adverse childhood experiences
- How is a child determined ‘competent’ and ‘credible’ to stand trial?
- Are children good observers?
- Childhood memory and amnesia
- When do we learn to lie?
- Best practices when interviewing children
- The role of the interviewer
- How to conduct a forensic interview
- Origins of the forensic interview
- Application of the NICHD Protocol
- Testing the effectiveness of the NICHD Protocol
- Remaining controversies and challenges
- Managing the challenges of compassion fatigue
- Balancing forensic and therapeutic perspectives
- Psychological risks of compassion fatigue and secondary traumatisation
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 4 Techniques for Interviewing Vulnerable People
- Recognising vulnerable people
- Defining vulnerability
- Why is it important for police to recognise vulnerable persons?
- Legal competency to take part in the criminal process
- Persons with cognitive impairments
- Older adults as witnesses
- Interviewing strategies for people with cognitive impairment
- People with social communication impairments
- Identifying the signs and symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
- Interviewing strategies for people with social communication challenges
- The roles of the forensic psychologist
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 5 Interviewing Suspects: From Interrogation to Investigation
- A brief history of getting information from uncooperative suspects
- The power of confession evidence
- Why are juries persuaded by confession evidence?
- The origins of psychological interrogation
- Can torture produce forensically useful information?
- The ticking bomb scenario
- The ineffectiveness of enhanced interrogation techniques
- Adversarial versus inquisitorial approaches
- Deception in the interrogation room
- How does an interrogation differ from an interview?
- Rights against self-incrimination
- The Reid technique: an adversarial approach
- The next stage in the evolution of interrogations: the PEACE model
- Military use of rapport and persuasion strategies
- Strategies of rapport building
- False confessions and the paradox of innocence
- The psychology of false confessions
- Why do innocent people confess?
- Laboratory evidence
- Types of false confessions
- False confessions and mandatory recording of interrogations
- Why confessions overrule innocence and evidence
- Innocence as a vulnerability
- The corruptive power of confessions
- Redefining the role of the interrogator
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- PART III:GETTING TRUTHFUL INFORMATION
- 6 Detecting Concealed Information and Deception
- The behaviour of lies: decoding behavioural deception
- What makes a good liar?
- What are lies?
- The search for nonverbal cues of deception
- Mental process theories: emotion and cognition
- Why do we believe in nonverbal indicators of deception?
- The tools of the trade: the polygraph
- What the polygraph measures and how
- Use of countermeasures
- Do countermeasures work?
- Admissibility in courts
- The language of lies: decoding verbal deception
- The Strategic Use of Evidence (SUE) framework
- Support for the SUE method
- The quest for a truth machine
- Can we measure intention?
- Exploring the next generation of truth machines
- Will these new lie detection technologies ever be legally admissible?
- Vulnerability to countermeasures
- The right to private thoughts
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 7 The Art and Science of Offender Profiling
- Background and goals of offender profiling
- History and goals of psychological profiling
- The five ‘Ws’ of profiling
- The profile creation process
- The current status of offender profiling
- Criminal investigative analysis (CIA)
- Generating an offender profile using CIA
- Limitations of criminal investigative analysis
- Investigative psychology, geographic profiling and crime linkage analysis
- Origins of investigative psychology
- Five approaches of investigative psychology
- Crime linkage analysis
- Comparing criminal investigative analysis and investigative psychology
- Offender Profiling: valuable insights, common sense or pseudoscience?
- When will offender profiling become an accepted science?
- How effective is offender profiling?
- Why is there still a belief in offender profiling?
- Future directions of training and research in offender profiling
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 8 Assessing Fitness to Stand Trial and Criminal Responsibility
- Assessing fitness to stand trial
- Fitness to stand trial across jurisdictions
- Why mental fitness matters
- How do forensic psychologists determine fitness to stand trial?
- Assessing criminal responsibility
- Mental states and criminal responsibility
- Evaluation of criminal responsibility and sanity
- Who is exempt from criminal responsibility?
- From determining criminal responsibility to determining ‘sanity’
- Insanity defence legislation
- Not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI)
- Malingering and its detection
- When does malingering occur?
- Clinical versus forensic settings
- The problem with labels
- Ways of detecting malingering
- The forensic interview
- Psychiatric malingering detection strategies
- Tests to detect cognitive malingering detection strategies
- Neuroscience and the insanity defense: do bad brains cause bad behaviour?
- Diagnosing mental illness
- How will advances in neuroscience affect the insanity defence?
- Three examples of brain changes that led to behavioural changes
- Ways that neuroscience can improve and inform the concept of legal sanity
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- PART IV:APPLYING PSYCHOLOGY TO FORENSIC TECHNIQUES
- 9 Correctional Psychology: Risk Assessment, Threat and Recidivism
- What are the purposes of punishment?
- Punishment and behaviour change
- Theories of punishment
- Psychological effects of imprisonment and institutionalisation
- American jails as modern-day asylums
- Adaptation and change in the prison environment
- The effects of sensory and social isolation
- Suicide prevention and alternatives to solitary confinement
- Ineffectiveness of solitary confinement
- The psychology behind effective prison rehabilitation programmes
- Rehabilitation programmes
- The ABC of rehabilitation programmes
- Reducing recidivism: the risk-needs-responsivity model
- Assessing recidivism
- Assessing risk and needs factors
- The risk-needs-responsivity (RNR) model
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 10 Police Psychology
- Police use of force
- Reasonable versus excessive use of force
- Racial explanations for the use of force
- The social dynamics of police-civilian interactions
- When lethal force is unavoidable
- The art of crisis negotiation
- The role of the police negotiator
- The Behavioural Influence Stairway Model (BISM)
- Hostage taker categories
- Psychological effects of acute stress on performance
- Acute stress and police performance
- Acute stress and perceptual distortions
- Psychological effects of chronic stress on performance
- Sources of chronic stress
- Mental health symptoms following critical incident exposures
- Trauma intervention strategies
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 11 The Psychology Behind Jury Decision Making
- Investigating the secret lives of juries
- Why do we have juries?
- The vanishing jury trial: a global phenomenon
- A brief history of trial by jury
- The secret lives of juries
- The Chicago Jury Project: the beginning (and end) of jury research
- How is data collected about juries?
- Predicting verdicts from juror characteristics
- Sources of jury bias
- Difference in social cognition
- How individual jurors interpret evidence
- Differences between judges and juries
- Strength of evidence
- The liberation hypothesis
- The problems of pretrial publicity (PTP)
- Juror comprehension of instructions
- Juror comprehension of scientific evidence
- The story behind jury deliberations
- Understanding evidence and decision alternatives
- Cognitive aspects of deliberation
- The role of personality injury deliberation
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 12 Psychological Aspects of Violence and Aggression
- In search of violent patterns
- Defining violence and aggression
- The problem with ‘random’ acts of violence
- Violence risk assessment
- Three generations of risk management tools
- The future of violence risk assessment
- Intimate partner violence
- Psychological and physical consequences of intimate partner violence
- Why don’t victims of intimate partner violence leave?
- Tactics of abuse
- Predictors of intimate partner violence
- Mass murder and risk assessment
- What is a mass murder?
- Leakage of threat intention
- Prevention by public reporting
- The psychological impact of terrorism
- The hidden world of Islamic State brides
- What is terrorism and violent extremism?
- What is radicalisation?
- A model of radicalisation
- Current approaches and future directions
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- 13 Forensic Victimology
- Forensic victimology
- What is forensic victimology?
- A brief history of victimology
- Victim precipitation
- Predicting crime risk: the seven-factor model
- The psychology behind victim blaming
- How do we assign blame?
- Explanations of victim blaming
- Can we reduce victim blaming?
- The effects of social media on victimisation
- Cyberstalking
- Is cyberstalking different than offline stalking?
- Theories explaining cyberstalking
- The cyberstalking process
- Cyberstalking interventions
- Searching for psychological closure
- The Need for Closure Scale (NFCS)
- The false promise of closure
- The ultimate closure: the death penalty
- Chapter review
- Names to know
- Glossary
- References
- Index
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