Criminal cognitions and personality: what does the PICTS really measure?
β Scribed by Dr Vincent Egan; Mary McMurran; Cathryn Richardson; Marie Blair
- Book ID
- 101821230
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 404 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0957-9664
- DOI
- 10.1002/cbm.355
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Introduction
The Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles (PICTS) is a measure of the criminal cognitions and thinking styles that maintain offending. The scale comprises 8 a priori thinking styles and two validation scales, the validation scales having been found to be unreliable. Owing to the large amount of apparently shared variance in the original validation study, this data matrix needs reβanalysis. Results from the PICTS were examined in relation to general measures of individual differences, in order to link the PICTS to the broader literature on the characteristics of offenders.
Method
The original PICTS dataβmatrix was reβanalysed using a more parsimonious method of analysis. The PICYS was also given to 54 detained, mentally disordered offenders along with the NEOβFive Factor Inventory, the SensationβSeeking Scale (SSS), the Attention Deficit Scales for Adults (ADSA) and, as a measure of general intelligence, the Standard Progressive Matrices.
Results
Principal components analysis suggested that the PICTS really comprised two factors: a lack of thoughtfulness (i.e. lack of attention to one's experience), and wilful hostility, with the first factor being most well defined. Intelligence was not associated with any factor of criminal thinking style. High scores on the ADSA and Disinhibition and Boredom Susceptibility subscales of the SSS were associated with much greater endorsement of criminal sentiments; high Neuroticism, low Extroversion, and low Agreeableness were slightly lower correlates.
Discussion
The issues involved in criminogenic cognitions need clarification and to be linked to the broader literature on cognitive distortions and personality. Interventions targeted at dismantling impulsive destructive behaviour, whether it be thoughtlessness or wilful hostility, may be effected by increasing thinking skills, so breaking down the cognitions that maintain criminal behaviour. Copyright Β© 2000 Whurr Publishers Ltd.
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