Cards (11)

    • Aims of the bottom-up approach

      Generate a picture of the offender: their likely characteristics, routines, behaviours and social background. This happens through systematic analysis of evidence at crime scene.
    • Hypotheses
      Unlike TDA, bottom up does not begin with a fixed hypothesis. Instead, a data driven profile emerges as the investigator engages in deeper detail of offence as this approach is more grounded in psychological theory than TDA.
    • Investigative psychology

      Attempts to apply statistical procedures, alongside psychological theory, to the analysis of crime scene evidence.
    • Aim of investigative psychology

      To establish patterns of behaviour that are likely to occur across crime scenes in order to develop a statistical database which then acts as a baseline for comparison.
    • Specific details
      An offence, or related offences, can then be matched against this database to reveal important details about the offender. This may also determine whether a series of offences are linked in that they are likely to have been committed by the same person.
    • Interpersonal coherence
      The way an offender behaves at the scene, including how they 'interact' with the victim, may reflect their behaviour in more everyday situations.
    • Geographical profiling

      Spatial consistency: that an offender's operational base and possible future offences are revealed by the geographical location of their previous crimes. Time and and place are key variables.
    • Rossmo
      Introduced geographical profiling and used information to do with location of linked crime scenes to make inferences about the likely home base of an offender. This is crime mapping.
    • Crime mapping and psychology

      Can be used in conjunction to create a hypothesis about how the offender thinks as well as their modus operandi. Assumption that serial offenders will restrict their work to geographical area they're familiar with.
    • Centre of gravity
      Likely includes base of operations of offender. Also helps to make an educated guess where they strike next- jeopardy surface.
    • Canter's circle theory

      Proposed two models of behaviour: Marauder (works close to home) and Commuter (travels away). The pattern of offending is likely to form a circle around their usual residence, and this becomes more apparent the more offences there are.