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Journal ArticleDOI

Communicating Violence Risk: Frequency Formats, Vivid Outcomes, and Forensic Settings

TLDR
In this article, a survey of experienced clinical psychologists who identified a professional interest in forensic psychology through membership information maintained by the American Psychological Association found that frequency and vivid depiction both resulted in more conservative risk management decisions, but only for clinicians who worked in forensic facilities.
Abstract
Slovic, Monahan, and MacGregor (2000) recently found that clinicians were more likely to keep a patient in the hospital if the patient's violence risk had been communicated in a frequency format (“20 out of 100 patients”) as compared to a probability format (“20% likely”). This finding was explained by suggesting that it is easier to visualize frequencies than probabilities. If so, other ways of influencing visualization, such as vivid, compared with pallid, depiction of the violent outcome, should also result in more conservative risk management decisions. The present study examined this hypothesis using data from a survey of experienced clinical psychologists (n = 226) who identified a professional interest in forensic psychology through membership information maintained by the American Psychological Association. We found that frequency and vivid depiction both resulted in more conservative risk management decisions, but only for clinicians who worked in forensic facilities. Reasons why forensic psychol...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Numeric, Verbal, and Visual Formats of Conveying Health Risks: Suggested Best Practices and Future Recommendations

TL;DR: Best practices for conveying magnitude of health risks using numeric, verbal, and visual formats are offered and several recommendations are suggested for enhancing precision in perception of risk by presenting risk magnitudes numerically and visually.
Journal ArticleDOI

The psychological assessment of risk for crime and violence.

TL;DR: Risk assessments for crime and violence are different from other forms of psychological assessment because the presenting problem is not directly observed as discussed by the authors, and therapists working with criminals may never see a crime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does Using Nonnumerical Terms to Describe Risk Aid Violence Risk Communication? Clinician Agreement and Decision Making

TL;DR: It is suggested that nonnumerical descriptive terms do not aid effective communication of violence risk and that contextual information might artificially affect estimated risk.
References
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Posted Content

Risk as Feelings

TL;DR: It is shown that emotional reactions to risky situations often diverge from cognitive assessments of those risks, and when such divergence occurs, emotional reactions often drive behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk as feelings.

TL;DR: This article proposed the risk-as-feelings hypothesis, which highlights the role of affect experienced at the moment of decision making, and showed that emotional reactions to risky situations often diverge from cognitive assessments of those risks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving Risk Communication

TL;DR: Several strategies are suggested to achieve risk communication objectives like improving public knowledge about risks and risk management, encouraging risk reduction behavior, understanding public values and concerns, and increasing trust and credibility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Violence risk assessment and risk communication: the effects of using actual cases, providing instruction, and employing probability versus frequency formats.

TL;DR: This article describes studies designed to inform policy makers and practitioners about factors influencing the validity of violence risk assessment and risk communication and describes the response-scale effects found by Slovic and Monahan (1995).
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