T/F
Name that term
UNL Psych & Law Program
Psycho
pathology
Social & Law
100

Mental health professionals have a special ability to predict violence

False. In the 1970s both APAs decreed that mental health professionals have no special ability to predict violence, but can predict risk using probability

100

The deliberate faking of a disorder to achieve a desired outcome

Malingering

100

What course (name and number) can undergraduate psychology majors take related to the topic?

Psyc 401, Psychology and Law

100

What disorder is unique to kids that could cause them to be involved with crime and the law?

Conduct Disorder

(could also be oppositional defiant disorder)

100

What famous case led to the creation of 911?

Kitty Genovese

200

Lie detectors are admissible/can be used as evidence in most courts.

False; there are some situations that it can be used, but generally that’s not in many states and the defendant has to agree/want its use.

200

A person who is the subject of psychological examination for the purpose of evaluating their psychological state for the attorney or decision-maker

Examinee

200

Name 1 of the labs in the psych/law department

Child Maltreatment Research Team, Culture, Cognition, and Law Lab, Targeted Violence Research Team, Subtle Prejudice Lab, Race and Ethnic Psychology Lab, Legal Decision Making Lab

Law and Policy Lab, Trauma, Violence, and Abuse Lab, B-Smart (Biobehavioral Substance Mechanisms and Related Treatments) Laboratory

200

Name at least 2 of the 3 categories of most common mental health issues in family court cases

According to Dell Family Law: Mood, substance use, and personality disorders

200

What is a factor that affects jurors in a way that they have a preference towards a certain outcome?

Juror Bias

300

The FBI has a behavioral analysis unit that profiles criminals just like in the show Criminal Minds

False. The BAU does exist, but unlike how it is represented in popular media it focuses on Threat Assessment, Threat Management, and identifying concerning behavior with targeted violence.

300

 Which theory of justice focuses on repairing the harm done by the perpetrator and rebuilding that person's relationship with the victim and society?

Restorative Justice
300

Which faculty member runs the law & policy lab?

Dr. Eve Brank

300

What types of testimony can mental health practitioners provide in a court of law?

Witness of fact - what they’ve seen/experienced

Expert witness testimony - draws on specific knowledge and experience and can make judgments

300

What is something (psychological term/concept) that can lead to a false memory of an event?

inattentional blindness; weapons effect; misattribution

400

According to the Innocence Project, of the 258 DNA exonerations they have handled to date, 25% have involved a false confession.

True

400

What is the term for predicting the likelihood a client will be violent or re-offend?

Risk Assessment

400

Name one set of joint degrees you can get from the UNL psych & law program

MLS/PhD (experimental or clinical), JD/PhD, JD/MA (psych)

400

What percentage (within 10%) of convicts serving prison terms suffer from psychopathy (psychopathic tendencies)?

25%

400

If someone claims they only stole money because they were starving (not because they are a criminally-minded person), this would be an example of ___.

external attributions; (also accept self-serving bias)

500

UNL’s Psych and Law program has been in existence since 1974

True

500

What is another term for not guilty by insanity? In other words, what is the name of the standard for determining NBGI?

M'Naghten Standard

500

 Name at least 3 of the core psychology faculty members in the program

Dr. Mario Scalora, Dr. Sarah Gervais, Dr. Ashley Votruba, Dr. Richard Wiener, Dr. Cynthia Willis-Esqueda, Dr. Eve Brank

Dr. DiLillo, Dr. McChargue

500

What famous Supreme Court case established the right to a competency test before a death penalty is carried out?

Ford v. Wainwright

500

What led to a false memory of a car crash in Elizabeth Loftus’ infamous study? (i.e. recalling more damage and higher speeds than what occurred)  

leading wording in the recall question; key words were ‘hit,’ ‘smashed.’ ‘bumped,’ ‘collided,’ or ‘contacted’

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