Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition

Previous investigations providing psychological tests for identifying the adult, habitual criminal have neglected the concrete-abstract facets of cognition. The present study explores the usefulness of the concrete-abstract dimension for such a purpose by means of the Kahn Test of Symbol Arrangement...

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Main Author: Kipper, D. A.
Published: Durham University 1969
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155
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.578150
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5781502015-03-20T04:48:50ZCharacterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognitionKipper, D. A.1969Previous investigations providing psychological tests for identifying the adult, habitual criminal have neglected the concrete-abstract facets of cognition. The present study explores the usefulness of the concrete-abstract dimension for such a purpose by means of the Kahn Test of Symbol Arrangement (the K.T.S.A.), and a Symbolization Test for Criminals (the S.T.C.), which was constructed by the author. Two selected groups were employed; an incarcerated 'criminal recidivists' group and a control group of 'non- criminals' from a vocational rehabilitation centre. The groups were matched for social-class and level of education. Controls as a group, however, were significantly older and scored higher on intelligence (p<.0l). Product moment correlations and analysis of co-variance indicated that the performance of both groups on these tests was independent of age and intelligence (measured by the AH4 part II). The results showed that controls scored significantly higher (more abstract responses) than criminals, on both tests. The criminals displayed a typical pattern of more concrete and repetitive types of symbolizations and fewer abstract responses. This has led to the formulation of typical K.T.S.A. and S.T.C. criminal ‘Symbol-Pattern’ which identified correctly 72% and 77% of all participants, respectively (chi-square, p < .001). A combined K.T.S.A + S.T.C. score elicited the best classification (80% correct identifications, chi-square, p < .001).).The results were interpreted in terms of the hypothesis that criminality is associated with an "arrested cognitive (and emotional) development on the decriminalization process", i.e. the process of socialisation. Future refinements of the S.T.C. were also discussed.155Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.578150http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/8097/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 155
spellingShingle 155
Kipper, D. A.
Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
description Previous investigations providing psychological tests for identifying the adult, habitual criminal have neglected the concrete-abstract facets of cognition. The present study explores the usefulness of the concrete-abstract dimension for such a purpose by means of the Kahn Test of Symbol Arrangement (the K.T.S.A.), and a Symbolization Test for Criminals (the S.T.C.), which was constructed by the author. Two selected groups were employed; an incarcerated 'criminal recidivists' group and a control group of 'non- criminals' from a vocational rehabilitation centre. The groups were matched for social-class and level of education. Controls as a group, however, were significantly older and scored higher on intelligence (p<.0l). Product moment correlations and analysis of co-variance indicated that the performance of both groups on these tests was independent of age and intelligence (measured by the AH4 part II). The results showed that controls scored significantly higher (more abstract responses) than criminals, on both tests. The criminals displayed a typical pattern of more concrete and repetitive types of symbolizations and fewer abstract responses. This has led to the formulation of typical K.T.S.A. and S.T.C. criminal ‘Symbol-Pattern’ which identified correctly 72% and 77% of all participants, respectively (chi-square, p < .001). A combined K.T.S.A + S.T.C. score elicited the best classification (80% correct identifications, chi-square, p < .001).).The results were interpreted in terms of the hypothesis that criminality is associated with an "arrested cognitive (and emotional) development on the decriminalization process", i.e. the process of socialisation. Future refinements of the S.T.C. were also discussed.
author Kipper, D. A.
author_facet Kipper, D. A.
author_sort Kipper, D. A.
title Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
title_short Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
title_full Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
title_fullStr Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
title_sort characterizing criminal recidivists by means of tests of cognition
publisher Durham University
publishDate 1969
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.578150
work_keys_str_mv AT kipperda characterizingcriminalrecidivistsbymeansoftestsofcognition
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