bottom up approach

    Cards (26)

    • What does offender profiling provide?
      A description of possible characteristics of the criminal and predictions about future crimes
    • What types of characteristics are included in offender profiling?
      Social, mental, and physical characteristics
    • In what types of crimes is offender profiling primarily used?
      In murder and rape cases
    • What is a requirement for using offender profiling?
      There must be a pattern that can be evaluated
    • How many sexual assault cases did Canter study?
      66 sexual assault cases
    • What did Canter's study reveal about crime scene events?

      Clusters of events commonly occur together
    • What are the four important pieces of information identified by Canter?
      Interpersonal coherence, time and place, criminal career, and forensic awareness
    • What does interpersonal coherence refer to in offender profiling?
      How the criminal behaves at the crime scene reveals aspects of their personality
    • Why is time and place important in offender profiling?

      It gives clues about where the perpetrator may work or live
    • What does the criminal career aspect consider?
      How far into the criminal career the perpetrator is and whether their crimes are likely to develop
    • What does forensic awareness indicate about an offender?
      Whether they are aware of forensic evidence that may be left at the scene of the crime
    • What was the case of the railway rapist about?
      A series of rapes that turned into murders near railway stations in England
    • How did Canter profile the railway rapist?
      He identified patterns in the criminal behavior using his database
    • What was the outcome of Canter's profiling in the railway rapist case?
      John Duffy was arrested, matching the profile provided by Canter
    • Who was Babb in relation to Canter's profiling work?
      A serial rapist caught by Canter
    • What pattern did Canter notice in Babb's rapes?
      The perpetrator responded to the discomfort of his victims
    • How does the FBI's top-down approach differ from Canter's approach?
      Canter's approach is based on statistical analysis rather than intuition
    • what does Geographic profiling (the study of spatial behavior in relation to crime and offenders) assume/believe?
      • Crime locations are not random
      • Familiarity is important to the offender
      • Patterns of offenses form a circle around the offender's base
    • What are the two types of offenders proposed by Canter?
      Marauders and commuters
    • What did Canter and Lundrigan find in their study of 120 murder cases?(support for geographical profiling)
      Significant geographical consistency in the behavior of all killers
    • What does the "centre of gravity" theory suggest?

      The offender's base is found in the center of the pattern of crimes
    • What did Kocsis's study examine regarding investigative experience?
      The ability of detectives and chemistry students to profile from a real closed case
    • What was the surprising result of Kocsis's study?
      Inexperienced chemistry students produced the most accurate profiles
    • Why might detectives perform worse in profiling according to Kocsis's study?

      They may fill in the blanks due to past experiences and guesses
    • What are the strengths and weaknesses of Canter's profiling approach compared to the FBI's top-down approach?
      Strengths:
      • Based on statistical analysis
      • More scientific and valid in psychology

      Weaknesses:
      • May not account for all variables
      • Relies on patterns that may not always exist
    • what is geographical profiling based upon?
      schema theory and mental mapping