Kocsis Richard N, Hayes Andrew F
School of Journalism and Communication, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol. 2004 Apr;48(2):149-60. doi: 10.1177/0306624X03258481.
This study investigated whether perceptions of criminal psychological profiles are influenced by the identity of the profile's author. Police officers were given a profile they were told was written by either a professional profiler or by an unspecified author. When judged in relation to the actual perpetrator of the crime, police officers tended to perceive greater accuracy in a profile when it was labeled as authored by a professional profiler independent of the actual content of the profile. But officers' judgments of the usefulness of the profile were not affected by knowledge of who wrote the profile. Explanations for this result focus on the ambiguous nature of criminal profiles and how this ambiguity enhances the likelihood that beliefs about the validity of profiling can color perceptions of the content of the profile.
本研究调查了对犯罪心理侧写的认知是否会受到侧写作者身份的影响。研究人员给警察一份侧写,告诉他们这份侧写要么是由专业侧写师撰写的,要么是由一位未指明的作者撰写的。当根据犯罪的实际作案者来判断时,警察往往会认为,当一份侧写被标记为由专业侧写师撰写时,无论侧写的实际内容如何,其准确性更高。但是,警察对侧写有用性的判断不受撰写侧写者信息的影响。对这一结果的解释集中在犯罪侧写的模糊性质,以及这种模糊性如何增加了关于侧写有效性的信念影响对侧写内容认知的可能性。