In thousands of cases each year in courtrooms across the U.S. and beyond, a person’s fate could hang upon the results of any one of at least 350 different psychological tests that judges routinely allow to be admitted as evidence. Yet new research at Arizona State University’s New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences shows that most of these tests and tools have not been reviewed in the most prominent journals, and of those that have been scrutinized, only 40% were judged favorably. Nearly a quarter were rated as unreliable.
Psychological tests can be used in court to help determine cases such as child custody or aid in judges' sentencing decisions, including on the death penalty. These tools included aptitude tests, achievement tests and personality tests. Tess Neal is an assistant professor of psychology at ASU’s New College, and spent the last three years leading a team that combed through court cases from coast to coast.
“There’s huge variability in the psychological tools now being admitted in U.S. courts,” she said.
Neal presented the findings at the recent annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Seattle during the talk, “Psychological assessments and the law: Are courts screening out 'junk science?'”
“Courts are required to screen out the ‘junk science,’ but rulings regarding psychological assessment evidence are rare. Their admissibility is only challenged in a fraction of cases,” said Neal. “When challenges are raised, they succeed only about a third of the time. Challenges to the most scientifically suspect tools are almost nonexistent. Attorneys rarely challenge psychological expert assessment evidence, and when they do, judges often fail to exercise the scrutiny required by law.”
Neal and her team suggest that a greater awareness of questionable testing tools is needed across the legal system, including among psychological scientists, mental health practitioners, lawyers, judges and community advocates. In an open-access paper just released, the team offers tangible suggestions that psychological scientists should create stronger measures and encourage experts to use tools that are valid and suitable for the task at hand.
Overall, Neal and colleagues hope that their findings encourage psychological scientists, psychologists serving as experts in legal contexts, attorneys and judges, and members of the public to improve their own and others’ knowledge about psychological assessment and to question these tools more often. This way, psychological experts involved in legal cases might produce the highest quality of practice, Neal and colleagues suggest.
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