Term
Homicide Profiling Index- Revised (HPI-R)
(Definition, categories, variables, coded for) |
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Definition
coding dictionary designed for use with police case files
=Assaults, Homicide, Rape, Theft-behaviors
IP made the HPI-R
300+ Variables. Pre/post crime behaviors, location, victim and offender demographics, narative
Presence, Absence, Unknown, Unclear |
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Term
Salfati 2000 Goals, and Basis |
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Definition
Purpose: Classification
Individual Differentiation of crime scenes
Offender background Consistency
A -> C Equation Link crime scene types to offender types
Used SSA and Feschback Instrumental/Expressive theory
Expressive = victim important. Instrumental = Victim is vehicle to other goal |
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Term
Expressive/Instrumental Crime Scenes and Conclusion (Salfati 2000)
(Behavior types in different ranges, common factor for each, and conclusion) |
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Definition
Expressive Behaviors:
30-50 Extreme physical attack- wounding behaviors
30-10 Offenders were prepared - bring weapon
<10 Separate themselves from the victim/crime scene
Taken together they suggest offender and victim knew each other to come extent. The victim is VERY important.
Instrumental Behaviors:
Behaviors not directed at person- rather towards attaining ulterior motive- money/sex
((30-50 wounding; 10-30 theft and sexual assault/ulterior motive; <10 sexual subset))
Conclusions:
Understanding behaviors together gives different meanings than looking at them alone. The co-occurence reflects the type of relationship between the victim and offender and the importance of the victim |
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Term
Expressive/Instrumental Offender Backgrounds (Salfati 2000)
(Types of background characteristics for each) |
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Definition
Same expressive/instrumental split
Expressive: History of difficulty with personal relationships, deal with people and situations as having a direct emotional impact on them. Victim is a specific person
Instrumental: Dealt with offenders previous criminal histories- theft/burglary/sexual; unemployment |
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Term
A -> C Equation Criteria (Salfati 2000) |
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Definition
Linking Crime Scene to Characteristics
Checked her validity
2 times criteria: case must have two times as many expressive behaviors/characteristics than instrumental (or vice versa)**
Explicit instructions on classification
(She had nothing to go on, completely new ideas, so she did it to recognize that offenders may react to the situation and there may be overlap of behaviors, also because it was a brand new classification)
Hybrid cases: roughly the same # of expressive and instrumental variables
(testing validity of model and providing specific instructions)
(expressive crime scenes can be committed by instrumental offenders, could only classify 50% accurately, and 2x criteria seems arbitrary)
(The fact that she tested her model was HUGE) |
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Term
Kcosis 2003 Purpose, Group and Results |
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Definition
Purpose: identify how profilers differ from others in their assessments and predictions of perpetrators.
Type of information contained in profiles
Method: Compared five different groups
Psychics, graduate psychology students, biology college students, police officers, profilers
Results:
Profilers: longer and more detailed reports; more information about non-physical aspects of offender. More knowledge of research/classifications used for profiling
Psychologists and profilers provided the most information about behavioral aspects of crime
Skills of psychologists and profilers are similar |
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Term
Kcosis 2000 Purpose, Group, Results and Conclusion |
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Definition
Purpose: Test the FBI’s assumption of what makes a good profiler.
Group: Psychologists, police officers, science and econ students, psychics, and profilers
Results: No differences between the groups in overall accuracy. Collapsing non-profiler groups together- profilers are more accurate than non-profilers.
Psychologists were better than police.
Conclusion:
Profilers more accurate than non-profilers.
Psychological knowledge is more pertinent to profiling than investigative experience or intuition |
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Term
Kocsis 2000 vs Kocsis 2003 |
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Definition
K2000 purpose was to test the FBI assumptions about what makes a good profiler, '03 was to find out how profilers differ from others in assessments
2003: Profilers better than non-profilers. Psychologists did well.
2000: Skills of psych and profilers similar. Psych knowledge is more pertinent to profiling than experience or intuition
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Term
Salfati 2000 Goals, and Basis |
|
Definition
Purpose: Classification
Individual Differentiation of crime scenes
Offender background Consistency
A -> C Equation Link crime scene types to offender types
Used SSA and Feschback Instrumental/Expressive theory
Expressive = victim important. Instrumental = Victim is vehicle to other goal |
|
|
Term
Expressive/Instrumental Crime Scenes and Conclusion (Salfati 2000)
(Behavior types in different ranges, common factor for each, and conclusion) |
|
Definition
Expressive Behaviors:
30-50 Extreme physical attack- wounding behaviors
30-10 Offenders were prepared - bring weapon
<10 Separate themselves from the victim/crime scene
Taken together they suggest offender and victim knew each other to come extent. The victim is VERY important.
Instrumental Behaviors:
Behaviors not directed at person- rather towards attaining ulterior motive- money/sex
((30-50 wounding; 10-30 theft and sexual assault/ulterior motive; <10 sexual subset))
Conclusions:
Understanding behaviors together gives different meanings than looking at them alone. The co-occurence reflects the type of relationship between the victim and offender and the importance of the victim |
|
|
Term
Expressive/Instrumental Offender Backgrounds (Salfati 2000)
(Types of background characteristics for each) |
|
Definition
Same expressive/instrumental split
Expressive: History of difficulty with personal relationships, deal with people and situations as having a direct emotional impact on them. Victim is a specific person
Instrumental: Dealt with offenders previous criminal histories- theft/burglary/sexual; unemployment |
|
|
Term
A -> C Equation Criteria (Salfati 2000) |
|
Definition
Linking Crime Scene to Characteristics
Checked her validity
2 times criteria: case must have two times as many expressive behaviors/characteristics than instrumental (or vice versa)**
Explicit instructions on classification
(She had nothing to go on, completely new ideas, so she did it to recognize that offenders may react to the situation and there may be overlap of behaviors, also because it was a brand new classification)
Hybrid cases: roughly the same # of expressive and instrumental variables
(testing validity of model and providing specific instructions)
(expressive crime scenes can be committed by instrumental offenders, could only classify 50% accurately, and 2x criteria seems arbitrary)
(The fact that she tested her model was HUGE) |
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