Answer these 40 Police and Public Safety Psychology MCQs and assess your grip on the subject of Police and Public Safety Psychology.
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A. True
B. False
A. Consultants
B. Researchers
C. Psychotherapists
D. Novices
A. Demanding
B. Homogeneous
C. Heterogeneous
D. Authoritarian
A. Frequent Factor Debriefing and Evaluation
B. Fitness-For-Duty Evaluation
C. Federal Fire Deposition Emergency
D. Full Factor Disorganized Emergency
A. Minimize harmful effects of job stress resulting from emergency situations
B. Intervene in a hostage taking or barricade incident
C. Determine which officer is responsible for corruption
D. Control publicity and public opinion following a department scandal
A. Lower than believed
B. Higher than previously
C. Higher in Caucasian officers
D. Higher in women and minorities
A. Normal personality traits
B. Behavioral deviations
C. Substance abuse
D. Adolescent misbehavior
A. More culturally diverse hostages
B. Fewer incidents of death or injury to involved parties
C. Reduced level of stress among police officers
D. Higher threats of violence by the hostage takers
A. Interpersonal submission
B. Expressionless contact
C. Functional suppression
D. Emotional dissonance
A. Age of the shooting victim
B. The circumstances surrounding the shooting
C. The officer’s personal characteristics
D. Quality of the officer’s marital relationship.
A. Critical incidents
B. Operational support
C. Police corruption
D. Suicide prevention
A. Financial difficulties
B. Easy access to weapons
C. Poor coping mechanisms following critical incidents
D. Difficulties in intimate partner relationships
A. Political activists
B. Individuals with mental disorders
C. Prisoners
D. Individuals who have committed a crime
A. True
B. False
A. Excessive force
B. Task-related stressors
C. Critical incidents
D. Police corruption
A. Pseudosexual
B. None of these
C. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
D. Sexual
A. True
B. False
A. Restitution
B. concurrent validity
C. Reconstitution
D. None of these
A. BIC standard
B. critical incidents
C. Tender years doctrine
D. All of these
A. Early intervention system (EIS)
B. False confidence
C. Cognitive dissonance
D. All of these
A. False
B. True
A. None of these
B. Filial loss
C. excessive force
D. Neonatal repression
A. 1974
B. external stress
C. None of these
D. 1960
A. Family-only
B. Generally violent/antisocial
C. All of these
D. Face (or content) validity
A. False
B. True
A. A forensic psychologist
B. Inwald Personality Inventory (IPI)
C. All of these
D. The parents
A. Adolescents are often better equipped than adults to withstand the pressures of interrogation.
B. job analysis
C. None of these
D. Recent research has revealed that interrogators are easier on adolescents than they are on adults.
A. Probation
B. None of these
C. Adjudication
D. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–Revised (MMPI-2)
A. True
B. False
A. None of these
B. NEO Personality Inventory–Revised (NEO PI-R)
C. Socialization
D. Neurobiological
A. The court
B. organizational stress
C. The prosecutor
D. None of these
A. personal stress
B. Ethnicity
C. All of these
D. Physical health
A. True
B. False
A. Physical health
B. personal stress
C. police culture
D. None of these
A. Medication
B. None of these
C. Post-shooting traumatic reaction (PSTR)
D. Psychotherapy
A. Burglary
B. Homicide
C. predictive validity
D. All of these
A. False
B. True
A. Psychopathy
B. Adolescent-limited offending
C. None of these
D. screening-in procedures
A. Crime scene profiling
B. Geographic profiling
C. All of these
D. screening-out procedures
A. All of these
B. Stage three
C. Family forensic psychology
D. Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16-PF)
A. True
B. False