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Improving Probation Decisions Through Statistical Training

NCJ Number
125986
Journal
Criminal Justice and Behavior Volume: 17 Issue: 3 Dated: (September 1990) Pages: 370-388
Author(s)
G T Fong; A J Lurigio; L J Stalans
Date Published
1990
Length
19 pages
Annotation
Much research in cognitive and social psychology has demonstrated that people often fail to incorporate statistical principles in making judgments and decisions.
Abstract
For example, people generally assign too little weight to base-rate information and too much weight to case-specific information. Probation officers are no exception. Two studies examined whether statistical training could increase the use of statistical principles in probation decisions. Study 1 found that novice probation officers trained on the law of large numbers were more likely than untrained officers to employ statistical principles in solving open-ended probation problems. Study 2 found that training novice probation officers on the law of large numbers increased their use of base-rate information on predictions about recidivism for 10 realistic probation cases, but only when the cases involved high risk. These results suggest that statistical training may improve probation decisions and judgments. 2 tables, 1 figure, 2 notes, and 17 references. (Publisher abstract)