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  5. Violence risk assessment and risk communication: The effects of using actual cases, providing instruction, and employing probability versus frequency formats.

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Article
English
2000

Violence risk assessment and risk communication: The effects of using actual cases, providing instruction, and employing probability versus frequency formats.

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English
2000
Law and Human Behavior
Vol 24 (3)
DOI: 10.1023/a:1005595519944

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Paul Slovic
Paul Slovic

University Of Oregon

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Paul Slovic
John Monahan
Donald G. MacGregor

Abstract

This article describes studies designed to inform policy makers and practitioners about factors influencing the validity of violence risk assessment and risk communication. Forensic psychologists and psychiatrists were shown case summaries of patients hospitalized with mental disorder and were asked to judge the likelihood that the patient would harm someone within six months after discharge from the hospital. They also judged whether the patient posed a high risk, medium risk, or low risk of harming someone after discharge. Studies 1 and 2 replicated, with real case summaries as stimuli, the response-scale effects found by Slovic and Monahan (1995). Providing clinicians with response scales allowing more discriminability among smaller probabilities led patients to be judged as posing lower probabilities of committing harmful acts. This format effect was not eliminated by having clinicians judge relative frequencies rather than probabilities or by providing them with instruction in how to make these types of judgments. In addition, frequency scales led to lower mean likelihood judgments than did probability scales, but, at any given level of likelihood, a patient was judged as posing higher risk if that likelihood was derived from a frequency scale (e.g., 10 out of 100) than if it was derived from a probability scale (e.g., 10%). Similarly, communicating a patient's dangerousness as a relative frequency (e.g., 2 out of 10) led to much higher perceived risk than did communicating a comparable probability (e.g., 20%). The different reactions to probability and frequency formats appear to be attributable to the more frightening images evoked by frequencies. Implications for risk assessment and risk communication are discussed.

How to cite this publication

Paul Slovic, John Monahan, Donald G. MacGregor (2000). Violence risk assessment and risk communication: The effects of using actual cases, providing instruction, and employing probability versus frequency formats.. Law and Human Behavior, 24(3), pp. 271-296, DOI: 10.1023/a:1005595519944.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2000

Authors

3

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Law and Human Behavior

DOI

10.1023/a:1005595519944

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