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Forensic Psychology Exam Study Guide Flashcards

Master Forensic Psychology Exam Study Guide with these flashcards. Review key terms, definitions, and concepts using active recall to strengthen your understanding and ace your exams.

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Forensic Psychology

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Forensic psychology is the professional practice by psychologists who apply scientific, technical, or specialized psychological knowledge to legal, contractual, or administrative matters. It spans multiple subdisciplines (e.g., clinical, developmental, social, cognitive) and is used to assist in investigations, evaluations, testimony, and policy. Practitioners may provide assessments, expert opinions, and research to aid legal decision-making.

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Forensic Psychology

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Forensic psychology is the professional practice by psychologists who apply scientific, technical, or specialized psychological knowledge to legal, contractual, or administrative matters. It spans multiple subdisciplines (e.g., clinical, developmental, social, cognitive) and is used to assist in investigations, evaluations, testimony, and policy. Practitioners may provide assessments, expert opinions, and research to aid legal decision-making.

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Forensic Evidence

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Forensic evidence refers to scientifically obtained material that can aid in detecting or solving crimes, such as fingerprints, DNA, ballistics, blood-spatter patterns, tire tracks, computer data, photos, and videos. It is collected and analyzed under empirical standards to inform investigations and legal proceedings. Forensic practice emphasizes rigorous methods and an open-minded approach because answers are rarely simple.

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Forensic Psychologist

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A forensic psychologist studies how people think, feel, and behave and applies that expertise to legal contexts, often holding doctoral-level training and licensure. They perform evaluations, provide courtroom testimony, consult with attorneys, and deliver clinical or correctional services relevant to legal questions. Their role bridges psychological science and the law across many settings.

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APA Division 41

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APA Division 41, the American Psychology-Law Society, recognizes forensic psychology as a distinct area of practice and scholarship, reflecting substantial research and literature that differentiate it from other subfields. The division supports professional standards, research dissemination, and the integration of psychology and law. APA recognition helped formalize training, ethics, and specialized roles in forensic contexts.

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Master's Degree

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A master’s degree is a common minimum educational credential for many forensic-related jobs and typically requires about two years of graduate study. It can permit entry-level work and some clinical responsibilities, but certain roles (e.g., forensic evaluator, expert witness) may be limited or require doctoral-level credentials. Specialized training beyond the general degree is often necessary for applied forensic roles.

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PhD vs PsyD

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A PhD in psychology is generally research-oriented and usually takes 3–5 years beyond the master’s level, while a PsyD is clinically oriented and often requires 2–4 years. Both doctoral paths can lead to licensure, but the PhD emphasizes research and academic training whereas the PsyD emphasizes direct clinical practice. Choice of degree influences career focus within forensic psychology.

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Courtroom Work

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Forensic psychologists working in courtroom settings provide testimony, perform competency assessments, and evaluate issues such as criminal responsibility or mental state at the time of an offense. They may produce expert reports, consult with attorneys, and assist the court in understanding psychological evidence. These roles demand clear communication of scientific findings to legal audiences.

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Ethics

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Ethics in forensic psychology are moral principles that guide professional conduct, protecting clients and upholding confidentiality, competence, and boundaries. The APA code of ethics provides standards, but applying them in forensic contexts can be challenging due to dual roles, legal demands, and conflicting guidelines. Violations harm clients and the profession, so forensic specialists must work within their training and disclose relevant limits.

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Preemployment Screening

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Preemployment screening for first responders assesses mental and personality preparedness and may use contrasting approaches to evaluate existing functioning or to assist candidates in building readiness. Standards such as California’s POST guide screening processes for law enforcement. Screening should not rely solely on any single measure and should be followed by discussion with the examinee.

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MMPI

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The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) was developed in the 1940s to reveal mental health concerns and personality features relevant to screening and assessment. It is a widely used tool but should not be the sole measure for hiring or clinical decisions. Administrators are advised to discuss results with examinees and integrate findings into a broader evaluation.

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Types of Stress

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Stress is mental, physical, and emotional strain triggered by life circumstances and professional demands; first responders commonly face many stressors due to dangerous and unpredictable work. Stress manifests in various types—short-term, long-term, personal, occupational, and organizational—each affecting coping and functioning differently. Understanding these categories helps tailor prevention and intervention.

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Short-Term Stress

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Short-term stress is typically resolved quickly and can vary from low to high intensity depending on the situation. It often results from acute incidents and may not produce lasting impairment if effectively managed. First responders experience episodic short-term stress during critical incidents.

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Long-Term Stress

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Long-term stress is persistent and can be of lesser or greater intensity; its cumulative effects erode coping abilities and increase vulnerability to mental health problems. For first responders, chronic exposure to traumatic or demanding work conditions can take a serious emotional toll over time. Long-term stress often requires organizational and clinical interventions.

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Occupational Stress

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Occupational stress arises from job duties and is often more varied and intense for first responders, who may also face public hostility. Stressors include exposure to trauma, long hours, and unpredictable demands unique to emergency work. Occupational stress contributes to burnout, mental health symptoms, and impaired job performance if unaddressed.

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Organizational Stress

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Organizational stress is linked to workplace demands such as long shifts, counterproductive policies, and management practices that strain employees. Effects include headaches, sleep difficulties, social withdrawal, and increased risk of substance use. Organizational factors can be potent contributors to first responder morbidity and require systemic solutions.

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Depression

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Major depressive disorder involves persistent low mood, loss of interest, and impaired daily functioning, sometimes including thoughts of death or a wish to die. Depression is common among firefighters, veterans, and police, and can significantly affect occupational performance and quality of life. Early recognition and treatment are critical to recovery.

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Substance Use Disorders

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Substance use disorders are characterized by using larger quantities than intended, unsuccessful attempts to stop, continued use despite harms, and physiological tolerance and withdrawal. First responders may be at risk due to stress and trauma exposure, and these disorders impair functioning and safety. Treatment and workplace policies should address prevention and recovery.

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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

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PTSD is a response to exposure to injury, death, or danger and includes recurrent memories or dreams, reactions to cues, and changes in thinking, mood, and impulsivity. First responders are at elevated risk due to repeated exposure to traumatic events and frenetic, unpredictable work conditions. Symptoms often include avoidance of reminders and can be treated with therapies such as cognitive processing, exposure therapy, and EMDR.

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Fitness for Duty

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Fitness for Duty Evaluations (FFDEs) assess whether an employee’s psychological or medical condition affects their ability to perform job duties safely and effectively. The IACP has issued guidelines recommending voluntary or mandatory treatment as appropriate, and FFDEs can lead to reassignment, treatment, or retirement. These evaluations aim to balance employee rights with workplace safety.

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Investigation

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Investigation is the systematic examination of a topic or person to gather evidence and information, often using interviews and corroborating data. Practitioners across forensic disciplines conduct investigations to reconstruct events, test hypotheses, and inform legal decision-making. Methodical evidence collection and documentation are central to valid investigative outcomes.

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Detection of Deception

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Detection of deception concerns identifying when someone is lying, but human ability to detect deception is limited and varies greatly by context and individual. People commonly overestimate their accuracy and typically perform at about chance levels; behaviors like extended eye contact are not reliable indicators. Multiple motives for lying (e.g., self-protection, gain, duping delight) complicate detection.

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Cognitive Load Approach

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The cognitive load approach to deception detection posits that lying requires greater mental effort than truth-telling, which can produce observable leakage under increased load. Interviewers can exploit this by asking unexpected or detailed questions to increase cognitive demands and reveal inconsistencies. This method is a strategy to improve detection beyond relying on surface cues.

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Polygraph Accuracy

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The polygraph records multiple physiological functions under the assumption that deceptive answers produce specific autonomic changes, but its accuracy is debated. Polygraph proponents claim high accuracy, while many clinicians and studies find the evidence inconclusive or contradictory, and results can be unreliable for individuals with antisocial traits. Polygraphs are still used for certain screenings (e.g., LEOs, military) despite limits.

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Eyewitness Fallibility

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Eyewitness memory is fallible and influenced by factors such as wording of questions, viewing conditions, stress, bias, and expectations, which can all distort recollection. The Innocence Project reports high rates of misidentification in wrongful convictions, underscoring the limits of eyewitness evidence. Careful interviewing and corroboration are essential to reduce errors.

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Own-race Bias

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Own-race bias is the tendency for people to recognize and identify faces of their own racial group more accurately than those of other races. This bias significantly impacts eyewitness identification accuracy and persists even in multiracial societies. Legal professionals and investigators must account for this effect when evaluating identification evidence.

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Reid Technique

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The Reid Technique is an interrogation method that uses pressure, confrontation, and behavioral manipulation across nine steps to elicit admissions of guilt, including shifting blame and offering alternative questions to make confession more palatable. It has been criticized for increasing the risk of false confessions, especially among youths and individuals with developmental disabilities. Awareness of its risks has led to calls for alternative approaches.

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PEACE Model

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The PEACE Model is a five-stage investigative interview framework designed to reduce false confessions by allowing suspects to speak uninterrupted and by emphasizing planning, open questioning, and ethical conduct. It focuses on information gathering rather than coercive tactics, contrasting with confrontational methods like the Reid Technique. PEACE aims to improve accuracy and fairness in interviews.

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