Deck 8: Crime and Mental Disorders

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Question
Delusional disorders are also called

A) paranoid disorders.
B) psychotic disorders.
C) believe disorders.
D) schizophrenia.
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Question
Whose trial generated so much public outcry that Congress passed the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984?

A) Ted Bundy's
B) John Hinckley's
C) The BTK Killer's
D) O.J. Simpson's
Question
Some states supplement the ________ with the "irresistible impulse test."

A) M'Naghten Rule
B) Brawner Rule
C) ALI Rule
D) Durham Rule
E) NGRI
Question
DSM stands for

A) Dissociative Somatic Manual.
B) Diagnoses of Serious Mentality.
C) Douglas Simpson Marker.
D) Diagnostic Statistical Manual.
Question
The U.S.federal court system currently uses which insanity standard?

A) The Durham Rule
B) The M'Naghten Rule
C) ALI/Brawner Rule
D) Insanity Defense Reform Act
Question
The research shows that violent people

A) fantasize more than nonviolent people.
B) exhibit the violence triad more frequently than nonviolent people.
C) often have a history of mental disorder.
D) usually have a history of violence.
Question
A developmental status attributable to a cognitive impairment is called

A) developmental readiness.
B) intellectual amblyopia.
C) developmental dysfunction.
D) intellectual disability.
Question
If the court determines that an individual was robbed of her or his own free will at the time of a homicide because of mental disease or defect,the individuals would most likely be judged

A) IST.
B) incompetent to stand trial.
C) mentally ill.
D) NGRI.
Question
Which of the following statements is most accurate?

A) Most criminals are mentally ill.
B) Most criminals have a mental disorder.
C) Most mentally disordered individuals are not violent.
D) Most murderers cannot help themselves because of mental illness.
Question
The insanity defense is used in approximately what percent of felony criminal offenses in the United States?

A) About 1%
B) 5% to 10%
C) 11% to 15%
D) About 20%
E) Between 20% and 27%
Question
In the Brawner Rule,the caveat paragraph intends to exclude ________ from using the insanity defense.

A) defendants under the influence of alcohol at the time of the offense
B) psychopaths
C) defendants under the influence of drugs at the time of the offense
D) intellectually disabled individuals
Question
The core of the insanity defense involves which one of the following issues?

A) Competency to stand trial
B) Whether the person can be rehabilitated
C) Criminal responsibility
D) Past psychiatric history
Question
All of the following standards or rules to determine insanity are or have been represented in various state or federal legal systems except the

A) Dayton Rule.
B) M'Naghten Rule.
C) Brawner Rule.
D) Product Test.
Question
Which one of the following clinical diagnoses is most frequently found in criminal offenders?

A) Antisocial personality disorder
B) Psychopath
C) Delusional disorder
D) Histrionic personality disorder
Question
Disorganized,catatonic,paranoid,undifferentiated,and residual are all subtypes of

A) schizophrenia.
B) bipolar disorder.
C) obsessive-compulsive disorder.
D) delusional disorder.
Question
When the M'Naghten Rule is applied,the essential inquiry is whether

A) the act was the result or product of a mental defect.
B) the person was able to distinguish between right and wrong at the time of offense.
C) the act was the result of an "irresistible impulse."
D) the act was the result of an addiction.
Question
What was the Supreme Court's ruling in Jackson v.Indiana?

A) Psychoactive medication could not be given to incompetent defendants.
B) Psychoactive medication could not be given to defendants found insane.
C) Incompetent defendants could not be hospitalized indefinitely if no progress was made to restore them.
Question
Which well-known individual was found not guilty by reason of insanity?

A) Ted Bundy
B) Kenneth Bianchi
C) Bonnie Elizabeth Parker
D) Andrea Yates
Question
According to the DSM-5,which one of the following features is not a symptom of antisocial personality disorder?

A) Emotional intelligence
B) Impulsivity
C) Irritability
D) Deceitfulness
Question
What is the most common type of forensic assessment conducted for the criminal courts?

A) Assessment of sex offenders
B) Evaluation of sanity
C) Assessment of dangerousness at sentencing
D) Evaluation of competency to stand trial
Question
The right and wrong test refers to which one of the following insanity defenses?

A) Magna Carta
B) The M'Naghten Rule
C) ALI/Brawner Rule
D) The Durham Rule
Question
Mental health courts are alternative,specialized courts that are designed to treat offenders with a history of substance abuse.
Question
In Tarasoff v.Regents of the University of California (1974.,the Supreme Court of California held that a psychotherapist has an obligation to use reasonable care to protect potential victims of a patient.
Question
Which diagnostic label has been associated with the iatrogenic phenomenon in recent years?

A) Paranoid schizophrenia
B) Histrionic personality disorder
C) Post-traumatic stress disorder
D) Dissociative identity disorder
Question
The phenomenon that occurs when a mental disorder or syndrome is unintentionally caused by a clinician or practitioner is known as

A) Iatrogenic.
B) Tautological fallacy.
C) Projection syndrome.
D) Transference.
Question
Adjudicative competence is now the standard term for not guilty by reason of insanity.
Question
Which form of amnesia is the most widely used justification for an insanity defense or mitigation of criminal responsibility in the U.S.courts today?

A) Chronic organic amnesia
B) Alcohol-Induced Persisting Amnestic Disorder
C) Wernicke's amnesia
D) Limited amnesia
Question
The term prediction of dangerousness has been replaced by the term criminal responsibility.
Question
In Foucha v.Louisiana,the U.S.Supreme Court ruled that defendants found NGRI could

A) not be retried once they were no longer insane.
B) not remain hospitalized once they were no longer mentally disordered.
C) be hospitalized for as long as they remain dangerous.
D) be given medication to treat their disorder.
Question
The use of amnesia as a defense has been largely unsuccessful in the United States.
Question
MPD is synonymous with dissociative identity disorder.
Question
Statistics show that more than half of all prison and jail inmates might benefit from mental health treatment.
Question
The most common result of a PTSD defense has been one of

A) diminished responsibility.
B) guilty, but mentally ill.
C) not guilty by reason of insanity.
D) incompetent to stand trial.
Question
According to the text,the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior.
Question
Ken Bianchi,the Hillside Strangler,was diagnosed as a psychopath.
Question
In the Supreme Court case Sell v.U.S.(2003),the Court ruled that

A) in cases that did not involve violence, courts should be very careful in ordering medication to treat mentally disordered offenders who refuse the medication.
B) mentally disordered offenders should be sedated in the courtroom.
C) psychoactive drugs should not be ordered by any court against the wishes of the defendant, even if the mentally disordered offender tends to be violent.
D) mentally disordered offenders should be institutionalized until cured.
Question
Which disorder has been referred to as the UFO of psychiatry?

A) Dissociative Identity Disorder
B) Postpartum Psychosis
C) Dysthymic Disorder
D) Borderline Personality Disorder
Question
A rare but severe mental disorder believed to be linked to childbirth and similar to serious bipolar depression is postpartum

A) blues.
B) psychopathy.
C) delusions.
D) psychosis.
Question
There is evidence that men who have both schizophrenia and ________ are at an increased risk of violent offending.

A) substance abuse
B) delusional disorder
C) affective psychosis
D) depression
Question
Insanity is a legal term that refers to a defendant's state of mind at the time of the crime.
Question
Adjudicative competence involves competence to proceed and ________ competence.
Question
All states and all courts recognize that behavior that is likely to result in ________ harm is dangerous.
Question
Compare and contrast actuarial measures and clinical measures of risk assessment.
Question
A major criticism of drug treatment is the ________ they often produce.
Question
Delusional disorder is now included under the ________ spectrum and other psychotic disorders section in the DSM-5.
Question
How has the media affected public perception of mental disorder and violence? Include information on the history and prevalence of mental disorder and violence.
Question
Structured professional judgment is also referred to as structured ________ judgment.
Question
Schizophrenia typically begins ________ in life.
Question
Identify and include symptoms of the four diagnostic categories most relevant to criminal behavior.
Question
Risk assessment suggests that clinicians and researchers are more proficient at assessing the ________ that a given individual will engage in harmful behavior than they are at outrightly predicting that someone is dangerous or will be violent.
Question
Discuss the role of law enforcement and mental health courts in deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill.
Question
Describe guilty but mentally ill statutes.Why do many legal scholars oppose them?
Question
Most contemporary research indicates that the percentage of mentally disordered inmates in the nation's jails and prisons is ________.
Question
The ________ case was the impetus for duty to warn/protect statutes.
Question
Mental illness is manifested in behavior that ________ notably from normal conduct.
Question
Match between columns
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
False beliefs about the world
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Insanity
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Insanity
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Insanity
False beliefs about the world
Insanity
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Insanity
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Insanity
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Insanity
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Insanity
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Insanity
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Insanity
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
The Durham Rule
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Durham Rule
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Durham Rule
False beliefs about the world
The Durham Rule
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Durham Rule
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Durham Rule
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Durham Rule
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Durham Rule
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Durham Rule
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Durham Rule
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Mental illness
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Mental illness
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Mental illness
False beliefs about the world
Mental illness
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Mental illness
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Mental illness
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Mental illness
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Mental illness
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Mental illness
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Mental illness
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Actuarial approach
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Actuarial approach
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Actuarial approach
False beliefs about the world
Actuarial approach
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Actuarial approach
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Actuarial approach
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Actuarial approach
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Actuarial approach
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Actuarial approach
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Actuarial approach
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
The Tarasoff case
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Tarasoff case
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Tarasoff case
False beliefs about the world
The Tarasoff case
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Tarasoff case
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Tarasoff case
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Tarasoff case
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Tarasoff case
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Tarasoff case
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Tarasoff case
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Hallucinations
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Hallucinations
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Hallucinations
False beliefs about the world
Hallucinations
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Hallucinations
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Hallucinations
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Hallucinations
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Hallucinations
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Hallucinations
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Hallucinations
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
DSM
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
DSM
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
DSM
False beliefs about the world
DSM
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
DSM
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
DSM
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
DSM
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
DSM
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
DSM
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
DSM
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Guilty but Mentally Ill
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Guilty but Mentally Ill
False beliefs about the world
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Guilty but Mentally Ill
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Delusions
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Delusions
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Delusions
False beliefs about the world
Delusions
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Delusions
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Delusions
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Delusions
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Delusions
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Delusions
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Delusions
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
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Deck 8: Crime and Mental Disorders
1
Delusional disorders are also called

A) paranoid disorders.
B) psychotic disorders.
C) believe disorders.
D) schizophrenia.
B
2
Whose trial generated so much public outcry that Congress passed the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984?

A) Ted Bundy's
B) John Hinckley's
C) The BTK Killer's
D) O.J. Simpson's
B
3
Some states supplement the ________ with the "irresistible impulse test."

A) M'Naghten Rule
B) Brawner Rule
C) ALI Rule
D) Durham Rule
E) NGRI
A
4
DSM stands for

A) Dissociative Somatic Manual.
B) Diagnoses of Serious Mentality.
C) Douglas Simpson Marker.
D) Diagnostic Statistical Manual.
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5
The U.S.federal court system currently uses which insanity standard?

A) The Durham Rule
B) The M'Naghten Rule
C) ALI/Brawner Rule
D) Insanity Defense Reform Act
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6
The research shows that violent people

A) fantasize more than nonviolent people.
B) exhibit the violence triad more frequently than nonviolent people.
C) often have a history of mental disorder.
D) usually have a history of violence.
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7
A developmental status attributable to a cognitive impairment is called

A) developmental readiness.
B) intellectual amblyopia.
C) developmental dysfunction.
D) intellectual disability.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
If the court determines that an individual was robbed of her or his own free will at the time of a homicide because of mental disease or defect,the individuals would most likely be judged

A) IST.
B) incompetent to stand trial.
C) mentally ill.
D) NGRI.
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9
Which of the following statements is most accurate?

A) Most criminals are mentally ill.
B) Most criminals have a mental disorder.
C) Most mentally disordered individuals are not violent.
D) Most murderers cannot help themselves because of mental illness.
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10
The insanity defense is used in approximately what percent of felony criminal offenses in the United States?

A) About 1%
B) 5% to 10%
C) 11% to 15%
D) About 20%
E) Between 20% and 27%
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11
In the Brawner Rule,the caveat paragraph intends to exclude ________ from using the insanity defense.

A) defendants under the influence of alcohol at the time of the offense
B) psychopaths
C) defendants under the influence of drugs at the time of the offense
D) intellectually disabled individuals
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12
The core of the insanity defense involves which one of the following issues?

A) Competency to stand trial
B) Whether the person can be rehabilitated
C) Criminal responsibility
D) Past psychiatric history
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13
All of the following standards or rules to determine insanity are or have been represented in various state or federal legal systems except the

A) Dayton Rule.
B) M'Naghten Rule.
C) Brawner Rule.
D) Product Test.
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14
Which one of the following clinical diagnoses is most frequently found in criminal offenders?

A) Antisocial personality disorder
B) Psychopath
C) Delusional disorder
D) Histrionic personality disorder
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15
Disorganized,catatonic,paranoid,undifferentiated,and residual are all subtypes of

A) schizophrenia.
B) bipolar disorder.
C) obsessive-compulsive disorder.
D) delusional disorder.
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16
When the M'Naghten Rule is applied,the essential inquiry is whether

A) the act was the result or product of a mental defect.
B) the person was able to distinguish between right and wrong at the time of offense.
C) the act was the result of an "irresistible impulse."
D) the act was the result of an addiction.
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k this deck
17
What was the Supreme Court's ruling in Jackson v.Indiana?

A) Psychoactive medication could not be given to incompetent defendants.
B) Psychoactive medication could not be given to defendants found insane.
C) Incompetent defendants could not be hospitalized indefinitely if no progress was made to restore them.
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18
Which well-known individual was found not guilty by reason of insanity?

A) Ted Bundy
B) Kenneth Bianchi
C) Bonnie Elizabeth Parker
D) Andrea Yates
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
According to the DSM-5,which one of the following features is not a symptom of antisocial personality disorder?

A) Emotional intelligence
B) Impulsivity
C) Irritability
D) Deceitfulness
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k this deck
20
What is the most common type of forensic assessment conducted for the criminal courts?

A) Assessment of sex offenders
B) Evaluation of sanity
C) Assessment of dangerousness at sentencing
D) Evaluation of competency to stand trial
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The right and wrong test refers to which one of the following insanity defenses?

A) Magna Carta
B) The M'Naghten Rule
C) ALI/Brawner Rule
D) The Durham Rule
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k this deck
22
Mental health courts are alternative,specialized courts that are designed to treat offenders with a history of substance abuse.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In Tarasoff v.Regents of the University of California (1974.,the Supreme Court of California held that a psychotherapist has an obligation to use reasonable care to protect potential victims of a patient.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which diagnostic label has been associated with the iatrogenic phenomenon in recent years?

A) Paranoid schizophrenia
B) Histrionic personality disorder
C) Post-traumatic stress disorder
D) Dissociative identity disorder
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The phenomenon that occurs when a mental disorder or syndrome is unintentionally caused by a clinician or practitioner is known as

A) Iatrogenic.
B) Tautological fallacy.
C) Projection syndrome.
D) Transference.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Adjudicative competence is now the standard term for not guilty by reason of insanity.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which form of amnesia is the most widely used justification for an insanity defense or mitigation of criminal responsibility in the U.S.courts today?

A) Chronic organic amnesia
B) Alcohol-Induced Persisting Amnestic Disorder
C) Wernicke's amnesia
D) Limited amnesia
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The term prediction of dangerousness has been replaced by the term criminal responsibility.
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k this deck
29
In Foucha v.Louisiana,the U.S.Supreme Court ruled that defendants found NGRI could

A) not be retried once they were no longer insane.
B) not remain hospitalized once they were no longer mentally disordered.
C) be hospitalized for as long as they remain dangerous.
D) be given medication to treat their disorder.
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Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The use of amnesia as a defense has been largely unsuccessful in the United States.
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k this deck
31
MPD is synonymous with dissociative identity disorder.
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k this deck
32
Statistics show that more than half of all prison and jail inmates might benefit from mental health treatment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The most common result of a PTSD defense has been one of

A) diminished responsibility.
B) guilty, but mentally ill.
C) not guilty by reason of insanity.
D) incompetent to stand trial.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
According to the text,the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
35
Ken Bianchi,the Hillside Strangler,was diagnosed as a psychopath.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In the Supreme Court case Sell v.U.S.(2003),the Court ruled that

A) in cases that did not involve violence, courts should be very careful in ordering medication to treat mentally disordered offenders who refuse the medication.
B) mentally disordered offenders should be sedated in the courtroom.
C) psychoactive drugs should not be ordered by any court against the wishes of the defendant, even if the mentally disordered offender tends to be violent.
D) mentally disordered offenders should be institutionalized until cured.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which disorder has been referred to as the UFO of psychiatry?

A) Dissociative Identity Disorder
B) Postpartum Psychosis
C) Dysthymic Disorder
D) Borderline Personality Disorder
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A rare but severe mental disorder believed to be linked to childbirth and similar to serious bipolar depression is postpartum

A) blues.
B) psychopathy.
C) delusions.
D) psychosis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 56 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
There is evidence that men who have both schizophrenia and ________ are at an increased risk of violent offending.

A) substance abuse
B) delusional disorder
C) affective psychosis
D) depression
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40
Insanity is a legal term that refers to a defendant's state of mind at the time of the crime.
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41
Adjudicative competence involves competence to proceed and ________ competence.
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42
All states and all courts recognize that behavior that is likely to result in ________ harm is dangerous.
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43
Compare and contrast actuarial measures and clinical measures of risk assessment.
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44
A major criticism of drug treatment is the ________ they often produce.
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45
Delusional disorder is now included under the ________ spectrum and other psychotic disorders section in the DSM-5.
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46
How has the media affected public perception of mental disorder and violence? Include information on the history and prevalence of mental disorder and violence.
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47
Structured professional judgment is also referred to as structured ________ judgment.
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48
Schizophrenia typically begins ________ in life.
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49
Identify and include symptoms of the four diagnostic categories most relevant to criminal behavior.
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50
Risk assessment suggests that clinicians and researchers are more proficient at assessing the ________ that a given individual will engage in harmful behavior than they are at outrightly predicting that someone is dangerous or will be violent.
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51
Discuss the role of law enforcement and mental health courts in deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill.
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52
Describe guilty but mentally ill statutes.Why do many legal scholars oppose them?
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53
Most contemporary research indicates that the percentage of mentally disordered inmates in the nation's jails and prisons is ________.
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54
The ________ case was the impetus for duty to warn/protect statutes.
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55
Mental illness is manifested in behavior that ________ notably from normal conduct.
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56
Match between columns
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
False beliefs about the world
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Multiple Iterative Classification Tree
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Insanity
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Insanity
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Insanity
False beliefs about the world
Insanity
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Insanity
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Insanity
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Insanity
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Insanity
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Insanity
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Insanity
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
The Durham Rule
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Durham Rule
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Durham Rule
False beliefs about the world
The Durham Rule
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Durham Rule
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Durham Rule
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Durham Rule
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Durham Rule
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Durham Rule
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Durham Rule
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Mental illness
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Mental illness
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Mental illness
False beliefs about the world
Mental illness
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Mental illness
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Mental illness
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Mental illness
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Mental illness
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Mental illness
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Mental illness
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Actuarial approach
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Actuarial approach
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Actuarial approach
False beliefs about the world
Actuarial approach
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Actuarial approach
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Actuarial approach
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Actuarial approach
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Actuarial approach
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Actuarial approach
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Actuarial approach
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
The Tarasoff case
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
The Tarasoff case
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
The Tarasoff case
False beliefs about the world
The Tarasoff case
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
The Tarasoff case
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
The Tarasoff case
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
The Tarasoff case
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
The Tarasoff case
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
The Tarasoff case
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
The Tarasoff case
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Hallucinations
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Hallucinations
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Hallucinations
False beliefs about the world
Hallucinations
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Hallucinations
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Hallucinations
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Hallucinations
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Hallucinations
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Hallucinations
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Hallucinations
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
DSM
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
DSM
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
DSM
False beliefs about the world
DSM
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
DSM
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
DSM
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
DSM
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
DSM
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
DSM
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
DSM
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Guilty but Mentally Ill
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Guilty but Mentally Ill
False beliefs about the world
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Guilty but Mentally Ill
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Guilty but Mentally Ill
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Guilty but Mentally Ill
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
Delusions
A disorder (some say a disease)of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a person's ability to cope with life on a daily basis
Delusions
The guidebook for clinicians seeking to define and diagnose specific mental disorders
Delusions
False beliefs about the world
Delusions
Major disturbances in perception which involve sensing or perceiving things or events that others do not sense or perceive
Delusions
Assumes that one cannot be held responsible if an unlawful action is the product of mental disease or defect
Delusions
Allows the court to render a "middle-ground" verdict in the case of allegedly mentally disordered defendants
Delusions
A risk assessment instrument developed by the MacArthur Research Network
Delusions
Addressed directly the question of what duty therapists owe to third parties in warning them of possible harmful behavior from their clients
Delusions
An approach to risk assessment that focuses on small number of risk factors,may ignore others
Delusions
A person's state of mind at the time an offense was committed
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