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Journal Article

Citation

Ingram JC, Marchioni P, Hill G, Caraveo-Ramos E, McNeil B. J. Clin. Psychol. (Hoboken) 1985; 41(3): 425-432.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1985, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3998168

Abstract

This study examined recidivism, perceived problem-solving abilities, type of offense, and personality characteristics in an incarcerated male population. Twenty black males and 32 white males were selected systematically from inmate populations. The MMPI, its special scales, and the PSI scales were analyzed; F, L, Re, and Do scales reported significant results. Recidivists scored significantly higher than nonrecidivists on the impulsive scale of the Problem Solving Inventory. Black recidivists generated significantly higher scores on the F scale than did black or white nonrecidivists. The Pd scale reported a significant main effect for type of offense (p less than .05). Offenders incarcerated for violent crimes scored higher on the Pd scale than the nonviolent criminals. This research study demonstrated the utility of the MMPI and the PSI in discriminating between nonviolent and violent criminals.


Language: en

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