Author:
Acklin Marvin W.,Velasquez Joseph P.
Abstract
Forensic psychologists commonly utilize unstructured clinical judgment in aggregating clinical and forensic information in forming opinions. Unstructured clinical judgment is prone to evaluator bias and suboptimal levels of inter-rater reliability. This article proposes Structured Professional Judgment (SPJ) methods as a potential remedy. Following a review of canonical forensic assessment models, the prevalence of bias in forensic judgments, and inter-rater agreement in criminal responsibility (CR) determinations, this article presents a SPJ model for CR evaluations translated from violence risk assessment methodology. A systematic user-friendly methodology is described, applying procedural checklists, application of a mental state at time of the offense (MSO) model using structured data collection methods, aggregation of empirical evidence guidelines, and post-hoc hypothesis testing using the Analysis of Competing Hypotheses (ACH). A case study describes application of the procedural and CR decision model in a complex homicide case. The model demonstrates the power and efficacy of the application of SPJ to forensic decision-making and is relevant to other types of forensic assessment (e.g., competency to stand trial, post-acquittal release decision-making).
Reference72 articles.
1. Clinicians' opinions on the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses in clinical settings;Aboraya;Psychiatry,2007
2. Assessing field reliability of forensic decision-making in criminal court;Acklin;J. Forensic Psychol. Pract.,2016
3. Psychodiagnosis of personality structure: psychotic personality organization;Acklin;J. Pers. Assess.,1992
4. Behavioral science foundations of the Rorschach Test: research and clinical applications;Acklin;Assessment,1999
5. The Rorschach test and forensic psychological evaluation: psychosis and the insanity defense;Acklin,2008
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献