ES EN
Head of The European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context
Vol. 8. Num. 2. - 2016. Pages 51-56

Predicting risk of violence through a self-appraisal questionnaire

[Predicción del riesgo de violencia mediante un cuestionario de auto-evaluación]

José Manuel Andreu Rodríguez1 , María Elena Peña Fernández1 , Wagdy Loza2
1Univ. Complutense de Madrid, Fac. Psicología, España ,2Queen's Univ., Ontario, Canada


https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpal.2016.03.001

Abstract

The Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ) is a self-report that predicts the risk of violence and recidivism and provides relevant information about treatment needs for incarcerated populations. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the concurrent and predictive validity of this self-report in Spanish offenders. The SAQ was administered to 276 offenders recruited from several prisons in Madrid (Spain). SAQ total scores presented high levels of internal consistency (alpha=.92). Correlations of the instrument with violence risk instruments were statistically significant and showed a moderate magnitude, indicating a reasonable degree of concurrent validity. The ROC analysis carried out on the SAQ total score revealed an AUC of .80, showing acceptable accuracy discriminating between violent and nonviolent recidivist groups. It is concluded that the SAQ total score is a reliable and valid measure to estimate violence and recidivism risk in Spanish offenders. 

Resumen

El cuestionario Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ) [cuestionario de autovaloración] es una medida de auto-informe que predice el riesgo de violencia y reincidencia, además de permitir evaluar las necesidades de tratamiento para poblaciones penitenciarias. El objetivo de este estudio fue evaluar su validez concurrente y predictiva en una muestra española de delincuentes. El cuestionario fue administrado a 276 delincuentes procedentes de varios centros penitenciarios de Madrid (España). El coeficiente alfa de Cronbach que se obtuvo para la puntuación total del SAQ fue elevado (alfa=.92). Las correlaciones obtenidas con otros instrumentos de riesgo de violencia fueron estadísticamente significativas y presentaron una magnitud moderada, indicando un razonable grado de validez concurrente del instrumento. El análisis de la curva ROC reveló un área bajo la curva de .80, mostrando una aceptable capacidad de precisión a la hora de discriminar entre grupos de reincidentes violentos y no violentos. Se concluye que la puntuación total del SAQ proporciona una medida suficientemente fiable y válida para estimar violencia y riesgo de reincidencia en población de delincuentes españoles. 

The prediction of violent behavior is an important public safety aim for forensic and correction personnel, as they make decisions regarding release from prison ( Kubiak, Kim, Bybee, & Eshelman, 2014 ). Offender risk assessment instruments are used by these professionals as a tool to assist in the prediction of recidivism and violent behavior. These instruments are based on advances in identifying factors that are facilitators of violence risk ( Andrews & Bonta, 2010; Douglas, Skeem, & Nicholson, 2011; Shepherd, Adams, McEntyre, & Walker, 2014; Wakeling, Freemantle, Beech, & Elliott, 2011; Yang, Wong, & Coid, 2010 ).

Given the necessity for a permanent assessment to identify whether the individual poses a risk to society and, if so, the nature of this risk, the instruments used for this purpose must be reliable, with good predictive utility ( Loza, Dhaliwhal, Kroner, & Loza-Fanous, 2000 ). On the one hand, the use of standardized tools has been instigated and continues to thrive because many studies have demonstrated that clinicians’ judgments alone led to many erroneous decisions and unacceptably high false positives ( Loza, 2005 ). On the other hand, the use of standardized tools improves the predictive accuracy of recidivism, violent behavior, sexual offense, and gender violence ( Kroner & Yessine, 2013; Loza & Green, 2003; Loza & Loza-Fanous, 2000; Pérez, Martínez, & Redondo, 2009 ).

According to Kubiak et al. (2014) , violence risk assessment has changed over the past 50 years from relying on clinical judgments of risk (first generation risk assessments) to the latest instruments that integrate different dimensions of risk management, selection of intervention, and assessment of change during the rehabilitation process (fourth generation risk assessments). Whereas the first generation of risk instruments only assessed static factors (e.g., factors unlikely to change, such as past criminal history), the more recently developed third/fourth generation tools incorporate dynamic factors (e.g., factors that can be changed) and are able to assess treatment needs ( Andrade, O’ Neill, & Diener, 2009; Gómez-Hermoso, 2009; Smith, Cullen, & Latessa, 2009 ). Morash (2009) summarized the different purposes of violence risk assessment instruments: a) prediction of prison misconduct, b) identifying the treatment needs of offenders, c) providing interventions to address those needs, d) identifying the needs that are most predictive of behavior problems and recidivism, e) identifying those individuals with high level of recidivism, and f) developing plans of intervention that will address these needs.

A recent meta-analysis of the outcomes attributable to various instruments and methods used to predict violence highlights a self-report risk instrument, the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ; Loza, 2005 ). The SAQ measures the predominant, predictive aspects (dynamic and static factors) found in the literature and allows us to assess violence risk and recidivism in forensic and prison populations. The SAQ is a risk/need inventory designed to assist clinicians, forensic, and correctional professionals to predict violence risk but it can also be used as a measurement of pre- and post-treatment, an evaluation of offenders’ evolution, a support instrument for assignment and changes in penitentiary grades, and even determining penitentiary permissions ( Loza, 2005; Loza & Loza-Fanous, 2001, 2003; Prinsloo & Hesselink, 2011 ).

Loza (2005) maintains that this inventory has several important advantages over other violence risk measures: a) the SAQ can be completed approximately in only 20 minutes, b) the SAQ can be administered in groups, and c) interpreting the results requires minimal professional time, minimal training, and no special certification to obtain credible and reliable results. Despite that the use of self-report questionnaires can be vulnerable to self-presentation biases in forensic settings, different studies have also found evidence that self-report questionnaires can be as reliable and valid as observer rating instruments for violence risk assessment ( Loza et al., 2004; Mills, Loza, & Kroner, 2003; Prinsloo, 2013 ).

From these considerations about the SAQ for predicting violence risk, the purpose of this study was to analyze the concurrent and predictive validity of this self-report measure in a sample of Spanish offenders. The psychometric evaluation was performed by determining the concurrent validity with other violence risk measures and examining the validity of the SAQ for predicting violent and nonviolent recidivism.

Method Ethics Statement

The present study was reviewed and approved by the Committee of the Faculty of Psychology of the Complutense University of Madrid. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants. All participants were informed of the purpose of the research, the estimated duration of the assessment, and the procedures that were followed for the completion of the research.

Participants

Two-hundred and seventy-six male offenders who were incarcerated in different prisons in the Community of Madrid (Spain) participated at the present study. The average age of the participants was 36.4 years ( SD = 9.7, ranging from 19 to 66 years). Of them, 91.3% were Spanish, and 8.7% were of other nationalities. Table 1 displays the demographic characteristics of the offenders. Current sentence length ranged from 8 to 288 months ( M = 7.39 years, SD = 6.47). Seventy-five percent of the participants presented violent offenses (i.e., an offense against a person such as murder, rape, and assault), and the nonviolent offenders were convicted of nonviolent crimes such as property offenses (i.e., robbery without violence, breaking and entering, and theft). See Table 2 for criminal characteristics of the offenders.

Table 1

Sample Sociodemographic Characteristics ( N = 276).

  Frequency 
Marital status
Single  153  55.1% 
Married  46  16.7% 
Couple  21  7.5% 
Widowed  0.4% 
Divorced/separated  56  20.3% 
Education
No studies  26  9.4% 
Ninth grade or less  111  40.2% 
10th to 11th grade  82  29.7% 
High school  28  10.2% 
Vocational training  13  4.7% 
More than high school  16  5.8% 
Professional status
Unemployed  47  17.0% 
Unqualified employee  53  19.2% 
Qualified employee  159  57.6% 
Employee with specific qualification  10  3.6% 
Employee with higher education  2.6% 
Table 2

Criminal Characteristics of the Sample ( N = 276).

Characteristics  Values 
Current sentence length (months)  8-288 
M  88.68 
SD  77.64 
Age at current incarceration (years)  31.73 
SD  9.84 
Minimum and maximum values  16-60 
Age at first incarceration (years)  25.14 
SD  10.10 
Minimum and maximum values  10-60 
Official prior arrests (years)  3.87 
SD  3.99 
Minimum and maximum values  1-23 
Official prior convictions (years)  4.43 
SD  4.79 
Minimum and maximum values  1-50 
Measures

The Psychopathy Checklist–Revised (PCL-R; Hare, 1991, 2003 ). The PCL-R consists of 20 items and two factors assessing psychopathy in clinical and forensic populations. Several studies have supported the psychometric properties of the PCL-R as well as its use as a predictor of violence ( Mokros, Vohs, & Habermeyer, 2014; Olver, Lewis, & Wong, 2013; Piquero et al., 2012; Walters, 2012 ). The Spanish standardization of the PCL-R ( Moltó, Poy, & Torrubia, 2010 ) was used in the present study.

The Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG; Harris, Rice, & Quinsey, 1993 ). The VRAG is a measure developed for assessing the risk of violent recidivism in penitentiary and forensic populations. The instrument displays the probability that an offender will commit another violent crime. Higher scores indicate a greater risk of reoffending violently. The instrument consists of a list of 12 items: 1) lived with both biological parents till age 16 (except for death of parent); 2) elementary school maladjustment; 3) history of alcohol problems; 4) marital status (at the time of or prior to index offense); 5) criminal history score for nonviolent offenses prior to the index offense; 6) failure on prior conditional release (includes parole or probation violation or revocation, failure to comply, bail violation, and any new arrest while on conditional release); 7) age at index offense; 8) victim injury for index offense; 9) any female victim for index offense; 10) meets the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) criteria for any personality disorder; 11) meets DSM criteria for schizophrenia; and 12) Psychopathy Checklist-Revised score. The Spanish version of the VRAG ( Ballesteros, Graña, & Andreu, 2006 ) was used at the present study.

The Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ; Loza, 2005 ). The SAQ is a self-report instrument designed to predict violent and nonviolent recidivism and assess treatment needs in correctional and forensic populations. The questionnaire is composed of 72 true-false items that comprise eight subscales: 1) Criminal Tendencies; 2) Antisocial Personality; 3) Conduct Problems; 4) Criminal History; 5) Alcohol and Drug Use; 6) Antisocial Associates; 7) Anger; and 8) Validity. It is important to note the Validity subscale is included in the other SAQ subscales, and the specific items on this subscale allow one to validate the offender's accuracy when responding to the SAQ items. In particular, these items ask about prior arrests or convictions. Complementarily to the SAQ total score, the score for each subscale can be calculated to assess potential treatment targets ( Loza, 2005).

The SAQ measures the predictive variables found in the literature to be related to violent and nonviolent recidivism. The SAQ total score yields an estimation of the offender's level of risk and determines the offender's probability of recidivism, with higher scores indicating a greater level of risk and recidivism. According to Loza and Loza-Fanous (2003) , the probability of recidivism can be estimated from the total score as low (SAQ total score = 2 to 19), medium (20 to 30), and high (31 to 58). The Spanish translation of the SAQ (available in Andreu, 2010) was used in the present study.

Procedure

Participation in the present study was voluntary and the following inclusion criteria were used: a) speaking Spanish; b) having a definitive judicial verdict and sentence; and c) having given written informed consent to participate in the research. All participants were informed that the information provided would be used for research purposes, and that all their data would remain confidential. They were individually interviewed and assessed by forensic psychology students from the Master's Degree in Clinical, Legal and Forensic Psychology (Complutense University of Madrid), who were trained in the administration of the risk assessment protocols used in this study. Offender's criminal history was obtained from penitentiary files.

Data Analysis

Internal consistency of the SAQ was examined with Cronbach's alpha. Pearson correlations were used to analyze the concurrent validity of the SAQ with related variables of violence risk. Group differences comparing recidivist groups of offenders were analyzed using Student's t -test, determining the effect size with the partial eta squared coefficient. To examine the SAQ's predictive efficiency for recidivism, the ROC curve was taken into account. All analyses were performed with the SPSS software (v. 22.0).

Results Internal Consistency

Table 3 shows the internal consistency for the SAQ total score and subscales. The alpha coefficient for the SAQ total score was .92, and alpha coefficients for the subscales ranged from .35 (antisocial associates subscale) to .83 (conduct problems subscale).

Table 3

Internal Consistency of SAQ Total and Subscale.

  α  M  SD 
Criminal tendencies (27 items)  .75  11.35  4.39 
Antisocial personality (5 items)  .62  2.18  1.42 
Conduct problems (18 items)  .83  7.05  4.13 
Criminal history (6 items)  .66  2.52  1.68 
Alcohol and drug abuse (8 items)  .82  4.01  2.47 
Antisocial associates (3 items)  .35  1.05  0.94 
Anger (5 items)  .69  1.93  1.58 
SAQ total (72 items)  .92  30.10  12.51 

Note. SAQ = Self-Appraisal Questionnaire.

Concurrent Validity

Concurrent validity was analyzed by correlating SAQ scores with two instruments that show adequate psychometric properties for violence risk assessment. Pearson correlation coefficients between all measures are shown in Table 4 . The SAQ total score showed moderate correlations with the PCL-R total score ( r = .47, p < .01) and higher correlations with the VRAG total score ( r = .65, p < .01). Correlations between the SAQ subscales and the PCL-R total score ranged from .20 to .47 and correlations with the VRAG total score ranged from .34 to .65. Analysis of the correlations between the SAQ subscales and factors 1 and 2 from the PCL-R showed that antisocial associates and anger did not show any significant correlations with PCL-R Factor 1. The rest of the SAQ subscales displayed higher correlations with PCL-R Factor 2, ranging from .36 (anger) to .53 (criminal history), in comparison with PCL-R Factor 1, whose correlations ranged from .13 (criminal tendencies and conduct problems) to .22 (antisocial personality). Lastly, the SAQ total score had a higher correlation with PCL-R Factor 2 ( r = .66) than with Factor 1 (r = .13).

Table 4

Correlation Matrix of SAQ Scales and Violence Risk Measures (PCL-R & VRAG).

  PCL-R Factor 1  PCL-R Factor 2  PCL-R total score  VRAG Total score 
Criminal tendencies  .13*  .50**  .37**  .44** 
Antisocial personality  .22**  .49**  .43**  .47** 
Conduct problems  .13*  .61**  .45**  .57** 
Criminal history  .19**  .53**  .42**  .57** 
Alcohol and drug abuse  .13*  .44**  .20**  .54** 
Antisocial associates  .02  .41**  .26**  .43** 
Anger  .09  .36**  .26**  .34** 
SAQ total  .13*  .66**  .47**  .65** 

Note. SAQ = Self-Appraisal Questionnaire; PCL-R = Psychopathy Checklist–Revised; VRAG = Violence Risk Appraisal Guide; PCL-R Factor 1 = Interpersonal/affective; PCL-R Factor 2 = Lifestyle/Antisocial.

* p < .05, ** p < .01.

Predictive Validity

In order to examine the predictive validity of the SAQ, the following criterion was used as a measure of recidivism: a second or subsequent entry in prison by the same person for committing a violent crime in the community, which may have been committed after serving the sentence or while enjoying a temporary leave from prison. A violent crime is defined as a felony involving acts reasonably regarded as likely to harm other people, clearly threatening behaviors, sexual aggressions, and the destruction of objects ( Andrés-Pueyo & Echeburúa, 2010 ). The sample was divided into two groups: violent recidivists (individuals who committed a new crime qualified as violent during the temporal period ranging from 2007 and 2011) and nonviolent recidivists (primary offenders or individuals who committed a new offense considered nonviolent) during the same temporal interval in which retrospective recidivism of the offenders was estimated.

Table 5 shows the comparison of both groups in the SAQ: the means for the violent recidivist group were higher in all subscales and SAQ total score than the means of the nonviolent recidivist group, and the differences were statistically significant at p < .001. The highest value for the partial square eta coefficient corresponded to alcohol and drug abuse (.11), criminal history (.09), and SAQ total score (.09).

Table 5

Comparison of SAQ Scores across Violent and Non-violent Re-offenders.

  Violent
re-offenders 
N  M  SD  t  ηp 2 
Criminal tendencies  No  248  10.9960  4.28300  -4.76***  .06 
  Yes  28  14.5357  4.12295     
Antisocial personality  No  248  2.8470  1.43019  -3.91***  .04 
  Yes  28  3.0000  1.01835     
Conduct problems  No  248  6.7661  4.16484  -4.40***  .04 
  Yes  28  9.5357  2.84777     
Criminal history  No  248  2.3589  1.65564  -8.66***  .08 
  Yes  28  3.9643  1.13797     
Alcohol and drug abuse  No  248  3.7419  2.42748  -5.18***  .11 
  Yes  28  6.4643  1.17006     
Antisocial associates  No  248  1.0242  0.93483  -3.46**  .01 
  Yes  28  1.2500  1.00462     
Anger  No  248  1.8952  1.61380  -2.76**  .01 
  Yes  28  2.2500  1.17458     
SAQ Total  No  248  26.9718  11.42708  -6.54***  .09 
  Yes  28  38.7500  7.70582     

Note. SAQ = Self-Appraisal Questionnaire.

** p < .01, *** p < .001.

The next step in the examination of the validity of the SAQ was though investigation of the SAQ's predictive efficiency. Using the receiving operator characteristic (ROC) curve, the diagnostic efficacy of the SAQ was described in terms of sensitivity (probability that the measure correctly classified violent recidivist participants) and specificity (probability that the measure correctly classified the nonviolent recidivist participants). Values for sensitivity and for false-positive rates (1 – specificity) were plotted, and the area under the curve (AUC) represented the probability that the measure correctly classified participants as positive or negative with respect to recidivism. This area theoretically ranges from 0.5 (inaccuracy in discriminating) to 1.0 (perfect accuracy). The following traditional point system is a rough guide for classifying accuracy: (a) .90-1.0 = excellent, (b) .80-.90 = good, (c) .70-.80 = fair, (d) .60-.70 = poor, and (e) .50-.60 = failure.

The ROC analysis carried out on the SAQ total score revealed an AUC of .80 (95% CI [0.73, 0.87]), showing acceptable accuracy discriminating between violent and nonviolent recidivist. Thus, there would be an 80% probability that the diagnosis of a violent recidivist was correct. Figure 1 presents the ROC curve for SAQ total score and violent recidivism.

Figure 1

ROC Curve for SAQ Total Score and Violent Recidivism.

The best cut-off point that discriminated between violent and nonviolent recidivists was 32 (see Table 6 ), with a sensitivity of 80% and a 1-specificity of 30%. Thus, in eighty percent of the cases, a score of 32 correctly classified 80% percent of the violent offenders and 70% of the nonviolent recidivist group.

Table 6

SAQ Total Score Cut-off Points for Violent Recidivism.

Different cut-off points  Sensitivity  1 - Specificity 
30  .82  .37 
31  .82  .32 
32  .80  .30 
33  .79  .26 
34  .75  .25 

Note. SAQ = Self-Appraisal Questionnaire.

Figure 2 presents the ROC curves comparing the predictive efficiency of the SAQ, the PCL-R, and the VRAG for violent recidivism. The AUC of the PCL-R (AUC = .63) was lower than that of the SAQ (AUC = .80), whereas the VRAG obtained the highest AUC (.87).

Figure 2

ROC Curves Comparison for SAQ, PCL-R, VRAG and vVolent Recidivism.

Discussion

The main aim of this study was to analyze the concurrent and predictive validity of the SAQ in a Spanish sample of offenders. The analysis of the SAQ revealed adequate levels of reliability. In particular, the overall internal consistency of the total score of the SAQ was high (.92). Nevertheless, subscales with fewer than eight items (antisocial personality, criminal history and antisocial associates) showed lower internal consistency than the commonly accepted standards (.70 and above). On the one hand, the low internal consistency of these subscales could be attributable to the small number of items on them. On the other hand, Kubiak et al. (2014), Loza, Neo, Shahinfar, and Loza-Fanous (2005) , and Mitchell, Caudy, and MacKenzie (2013) found similar issues and pointed to small sample sizes and low inter-item correlations as possible explanations for low internal consistency. That the findings of the present research replicate these problems may point to the need for further developmental work on the SAQ subscales.

The results of this research regarding the concurrent validity of the SAQ were similar to those found by Loza et al. (2000) and other studies conducted with different type of populations ( Loza et al., 2004; Loza et al., 2005; Summers & Loza, 2004 ), when the SAQ total and subscale scores were correlated and compared with risk assessment instruments such as the VRAG ( Harris et al., 1993) and the PCL-R (Hare, 1991 ). Overall, the results obtained in our study highlight that the SAQ is a useful self-report instrument for violence risk prediction.

Following the original studies of Loza et al. (2005) , recidivism is used as a criterion to assess the predictive validity of the SAQ, and this has proven to be a crucial factor to predict the risk of violence ( Andrews & Bonta, 2010; Arbach & Andrés-Pueyo, 2007; Loinaz, Irureta, & Domenech, 2011 ). According to the criteria established by Andrés-Pueyo and Echeburúa (2010) , the rate of violent recidivism was determined by participants who re-entered prison due to the new commission of a violent crime over a 5-year period during the 9 years in which this research was conducted. In the present study, this procedure allowed finding a violent recidivism rate of 10.1%, similar to the violent recidivism rates described by other studies in Spain, which ranged from 10 to 18% ( Andrés-Pueyo & Echeburúa, 2010 ).

The results of this study indicated that violent recidivists obtain a high score in the total SAQ and in all the subscales when compared to the group of nonviolent recidivists. The high effect size found for the total score of SAQ and its subscales, particularly the criminal history and drug and alcohol abuse, emphasizes this result. Indeed, these factors have been highlighted in numerous studies for their high capacity to increase the risk of criminal violence ( Andrés-Pueyo & Echeburúa, 2010; Andreu, Graña, Peña, & Ballesteros, 2013; Andrews & Bonta, 2010; Hanson, 2009; Soler & García, 2007 ).

With regard to the predictive efficiency of the instrument, it was analyzed by the ROC curve to determine the discriminant ability of the SAQ when distinguishing recidivist offenders from those who were not recidivists. In the case of violent prison recidivism, the AUC obtained was .80; a high AUC value indicates adequate discriminant ability of the instrument. Indeed, after a follow-up period of two years, Loza and Loza-Fanous (2000) found that the total SAQ score for general recidivism had an AUC of .80, and of .75 for violent recidivism, a lower value than that found in the current investigation. However, Loza and Loza-Fanous (2003) found higher sensitivity indices of predictive validity for the SAQ, reaching 85%, and specificity of 70%, when predicting future violent crimes in follow-up periods up to five years after the offenders’ release.

In the present study, the cut-off score of the instrument was selected as reflecting a better balance between sensitivity (true positive rate of repeat offenders) and specificity (true negative rate of offenders). In the case of violent recidivism, the most suitable point for the SAQ was a cut-off score that ranked 32 and 80% of those who show violent recidivism (true positives), but this cut-off yielded 30% of false positives.

Findings of this study suggest that the SAQ results were quite similar to other predictive validation analyses ( Loza et al., 2000; Loza & Green, 2003 ). According to our results, it can be concluded that the SAQ total score is a reliable and valid measure for predicting violence risk in Spanish offenders. Nevertheless, it is not recommended that the SAQ be considered a replacement for more comprehensive violence risk instruments, but rather that the SAQ fills a gap for delinquents who would otherwise not be assessed and may act as a supplement to offer case management staff new information. It is important to highlight that the Spanish version of the SAQ only provides information for a complementary use in violence risk assessment, and convergence with other instruments validated for the prediction of violence should be sought. Nevertheless, an important limitation of this study is its retrospective design because this type of design does not allow predicting recidivism among violent offenders after their release. Therefore, estimation of predictive validity of the SAQ should be performed using a longitudinal design with prospective offenders’ data collection.

To sum up, the SAQ would meet virtually most of the guidelines postulated by Singh, Yang, Mulvey, and the RAGGE group (2015) , who have recently proposed a list of criteria as a guide for assessing the applicability, practicality, and effectiveness of studies on the predictive validity of violence risk. Thus, the risk assessment provided by this instrument is useful for predicting violence risk and managing such risk in Spanish offenders by incorporating dynamic factors of interest as well as technical guidance for developing security measures and specific interventions in offenders. Ultimately, the present study provides psychologists with a quality self-report tool for the prediction and management of violence risk in forensic and prison settings.

Conflict of Interest

The authors of this article declare no conflict of interest.

References
Andrade et al., 2009
J. Andrade
K. O’ Neill
R.B. Diener
Violence risk assessment and risk management: A historical overview and clinical application
Handbook of violence risk assessment and treatment: New approaches for mental health professionals
Springer
New York
2009
3-40
Andrés-Pueyo and Echeburúa, 2010
A. Andrés-Pueyo
E. Echeburúa
Valoración del riesgo de violencia: instrumentos disponibles e indicaciones de aplicación [Violence risk assessment: Available tools and instructions for use]
Psicothema
22
2010
403-9
Andreu, 2010
Andreu, J. M. (2010). Valoración actuarial del riesgo de reincidencia delictiva [Actuarial assessment of offender recidivism]. In J. L. Graña, M. E. Peña, & J.M. Andreu (Eds.), Manual de psicología clínica, legal y forense [Manual of forensic, legal and clinical psychology]. Complutense University of Madrid.
Andreu et al., 2013
J.M. Andreu
J.L. Graña
M.E. Peña
A. Ballesteros
Riesgo de violencia y psicopatía en diferentes tipologías criminales: Un estudio empírico [Violence risk and psychopathy in different criminal typologies: An empirical study]
Behavioral Psychology
2
2013
289-301
Andrews and Bonta, 2010
D.A. Andrews
J. Bonta
The psychology of criminal conduct
5th ed.
2010
Arbach and Andrés-Pueyo, 2007
K. Arbach
A. Andrés-Pueyo
Valoración del riesgo de violencia en enfermos mentales con el HCR-20 [Violence risk assessment in the mentally ill with the HCR-20]
Papeles del Psicólogo
28
2007
174-86
Ballesteros et al., 2006
A.R. Ballesteros
J.L. Graña
J.M. Andreu
Valoración actuarial del riesgo de violencia en centros penitenciarios [Actuarial violence risk assessment in penitentiary institutions]
Psicopatología Clínica, Legal y Forense
6
2006
103-17
Douglas et al., 2011
K.S. Douglas
J.L. Skeem
E. Nicholson
Research methods in violence risk assessment
Research methods in forensic psychology
Wiley
Hoboken, NJ
2011
325-46
Gómez-Hermoso, 2009
R. Gómez-Hermoso
Violencia en los comportamientos humanos. Valoración de la peligrosidad en presos reincidentes [Violence in human behavior. Assessment of dangerousness in recidivists]
Anuario de Psicología Jurídica
19
2009
43-60
Hanson, 2009
R.K. Hanson
The psychological assessment of risk for crime and violence
Canadian Psychology
50
2009
172-82
Hare, 1991
R.D. Hare
The Hare Psychopathy Checklist
1991
Hare, 2003
R.D. Hare
The Hare Psychopathy Checklist - Revised
2nd ed
2003
Harris et al., 1993
G.T. Harris
M.E. Rice
V.L. Quinsey
Violent recidivism of mentally disordered offenders: The development of a statistical prediction instrument
Criminal Justice and Behavior
20
1993
315-35
Kroner and Yessine, 2013
D.G. Kroner
A.K. Yessine
Changing risk factors that impact recidivism: In search of mechanisms of change
Law and Human Behavior
37
2013
321-36
Kubiak et al., 2014
S.P. Kubiak
W.J. Kim
D. Bybee
L. Eshelman
Assessing the validity of the self-appraisal questionnaire in differentiating high-risk and violent female offenders
The Prison Journal
3
2014
305-27
Loinaz et al., 2011
Loinaz, I., Irureta, M.,&Doménech, F. (2011). Análisis de la reincidencia en agresores de pareja [Analysis of recidivism in partner aggressors]. Barcelona: Centro de Estudios Jurídicos y Formación Especializada. Generalitat de Catalunya.
Loza, 2005
W. Loza
The Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ): A tool for assessing violent and non-violent recidivism
2005
Loza et al., 2004
W. Loza
A. Cumbleton
A. Shahinfar
N. Lee Hong
M. Evans
M. Conley
R. Summers
Cross-validation of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ): An offender risk and need assessment measure on Australian, British, Canadian, Singaporean, and American offenders
Journal of Interpersonal Violence
19
2004
1172-90
Loza et al., 2000
W. Loza
G. Dhaliwal
D.G. Kroner
A. Loza-Fanous
Reliability, construct and concurrent validities of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire. A tool for assessing violent and nonviolent recidivism
Criminal Justice and Behavior
27
2000
356-74
Loza and Green, 2003
W. Loza
K. Green
The Self-Appraisal Questionnaire: A self-report measure for predicting recidivism versus clinician-administered measures: A 5-year follow-up study
Journal of Interpersonal Violence
18
2003
781-97
Loza and Loza-Fanous, 2000
W. Loza
A. Loza-Fanous
Predictive validity of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ): A tool for assessing violent and nonviolent release failures
Journal of Interpersonal Violence
15
2000
1183-91
Loza and Loza-Fanous, 2001
W. Loza
A. Loza-Fanous
The effectiveness of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire in predicting offenders’ post release outcome: A comparison study
Criminal Justice and Behavior
28
2001
105-21
Loza and Loza-Fanous, 2003
W. Loza
A. Loza-Fanous
More evidence for the validity of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire for predicting violent and nonviolent recidivism: A 5-year follow-up study
Criminal Justice and Behavior
30
2003
709-21
Loza et al., 2005
W. Loza
L.H. Neo
A. Shahinfar
A. Loza-Fanous
Cross-validation of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire: A tool for assessing violent and nonviolent recidivism with female offenders
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
49
2005
547-60
Mills et al., 2003
J.F. Mills
W. Loza
D.G. Kroner
Predictive validity despite social desirability: Evidence for the robustness of self-report among offenders
Criminal Behavior and Mental Health
13
2003
140-50
Mitchell et al., 2013
O. Mitchell
M. Caudy
D.L. MacKenzie
A re-analysis of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire: Psychometric properties and predictive validity
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
57
2013
445-59
Mokros et al., 2014
A. Mokros
K. Vohs
E. Habermeyer
Psychopathy and violent reoffending in German-speaking countries: A meta-analysis
European Journal of Psychological Assessment
30
2014
117-29
Moltó et al., 2010
Moltó, J., Poy, R., & Torrubia, R. (2010). Escala de Evaluación de Psicopatía de Hare-Revisada [The Hare Psychopathy Checklist – Revised]. Madrid: TEA Ediciones.
Morash, 2009
M. Morash
A great debate over using the Level of Service Inventory-Revised (LSI-R) with women offenders
Criminology and Public Policy
8
2009
173-81
Olver et al., 2013
M.E. Olver
K. Lewis
S.C.P. Wong
Risk reduction treatment of high-risk psychopathic offenders: The relationship of psychopathy and treatment change to violent recidivism
Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment
4
2013
160-7
Pérez et al., 2009
Pérez, M., Martínez, M., & Redondo, S. (2009). Evaluación y predicción del riesgo de reincidencia en agresores sexuales [Assessment and prediction of recidivism in sexual offenders]. Centre d’Estudis Jurídics i Formació Especialitzada. Barcelona.
Piquero et al., 2012
A.R. Piquero
D.P. Farrington
N.M.G. Fontaine
G. Vincent
J. Coid
S. Ullrich
Childhood risk, offending trajectories, and psychopathy at age 48 years in the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law
18
2012
577-98
Prinsloo, 2013
J. Prinsloo
Offenders with mental disorders in a South African prison population: Profiling the behavioral characteristics on mental illness
Journal of Psychology
1
2013
133-8
Prinsloo and Hesselink, 2011
J. Prinsloo
A. Hesselink
An evaluation of the reliability and validity of the self-appraisal questionnaire (SAQ) in South African context
Journal of Psychology in Africa
21
2011
145-50
Shepherd et al., 2014
S.M. Shepherd
Y. Adams
E. McEntyre
R. Walker
Violence risk assessment in Australian Aboriginal offender populations: A review of the literature
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law
20
2014
281-93
Singh et al., 2015
J.P. Singh
S. Yang
E.P. Mulvey
The RAGEE Group
Reporting guidance for violence risk assessment predictive validity studies: The RAGEE Statement
Law and Human Behavior
1
2015
15-22
Smith et al., 2009
P. Smith
F.T. Cullen
E.J. Latessa
Can 14,737 women be wrong?. A meta-analysis of the LSI-R and recidivism for female offenders
Criminology & Public Policy
8
2009
183-208
Soler and García, 2007
Soler, C. S., & García, C. (2007). Análisis de las variables relacionadas con la reincidencia de los agresores sexuales [Analysis of recidivism-related variables in sexual aggressors]. Centro de Estudios Jurídicos y Formación Especializada Generalitat de Catalunya. Barcelona.
Summers and Loza, 2004
R. Summers
W. Loza
Cross validation of the Self-Appraisal Questionnaire (SAQ): A tool for assessing violent and non-violent recidivism on Australian offenders
Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
11
2004
254-62
Wakeling et al., 2011
H.C. Wakeling
N. Freemantle
A.R. Beech
I.A. Elliott
Identifying predictors of recidivism in a large sample of United Kingdom sexual offenders: A prognostic model
Psychological Services
8
2011
307-18
Walters, 2012
G.D. Walters
Psychopathy and crime: Testing the incremental validity of PCL-R-measured psychopathy as a predictor of general and violent recidivism
Law and Human Behavior
36
2012
404-12
Yang et al., 2010
M. Yang
S.C.P. Wong
J. Coid
The efficacy of violence prediction: A meta-analytic comparison of nine risk assessment tools
Psychological Bulletin
136
2010
740-67

Copyright © 2024. Colegio Oficial de la Psicología de Madrid

© Copyright 2024. Colegio Oficial de la Psicología de Madrid Privacy PolicyCookies Policy

We use our own and third­party cookies. The data we compile is analysed to improve the website and to offer more personalized services. By continuing to browse, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. For more information, see our cookies policy

Aceptar