
%0 Journal Article
%T The R-CRAS and insanity evaluations: a re-examination of construct validity
%J Behavioral sciences and the law
%D 1999
%A Rogers, Richard
%A Sewell, Kenneth W.
%V 17
%N 2
%P 181-194
%X For more information on the R-CRAS, see VioEval record number 336.  JOURNAL ABSTRACT: Insanity evaluations are characterized by continued professional debate and the paucity of empirical research. To address the latter, the construct validity of the Rogers Criminal Responsibility Assessment Scales (R-CRAS; Rogers, 1984) was examined via an extensive re-analysis of 413 insanity cases. A series of six separate discriminant analyses was examined to address major components of insanity evaluations. These analyses yielded highly discriminating patterns (M hit rates of 94.3%) and accounted for substantial proportion of the variance (M =63.7%). In general, predicted relationships between individual variables and the discriminant functions were supported. We also addressed the usefulness of the R-CRAS additional variables for the assessment of insanity. We found that these variables contributed substantially to the determination of criminal responsibility. Finally, we pose important and polemical issues for forensic experts conducting evaluations of criminal responsibility. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 1999. Copyright © 1999 by John Wiley and Sons)  Survey Instrument Instrument Validity Adult Responsibility Offender Responsibility Insanity Defense Mentally Ill Offender Mentally Ill Adult Mental Illness Offender Assessment Adult Offender Psychological Assessment 12-00<p />
%G en
%I John Wiley and Sons
%@ 0735-3936
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-0798(199904/06)17:2<181::AID-BSL338>3.0.CO;2-4