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Dive into the research topics where Emily V. Robinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Emily V. Robinson.


Behavioral Sciences & The Law | 2014

Mired in Miranda Misconceptions: A Study of Legally Involved Juveniles at Different Levels of Psychosocial Maturity

Richard Rogers; Jennifer A. Steadham; Chelsea E. Fiduccia; Eric Y. Drogin; Emily V. Robinson

The Supreme Court of the United States has long recognized that the vulnerabilities of juvenile offenders merit special protections due to deficits in experience and maturity. Appellate courts assume that Miranda warnings will inform juvenile suspects of their Miranda rights, and allow them to render knowing and intelligent waivers. This study examines Miranda misconceptions of legally involved juveniles (i.e., juvenile detainees and youth mandated to juvenile justice alternative education) at different levels of psychosocial maturity. These juveniles manifested an unexpectedly large frequency of erroneous Miranda beliefs; each group (low, middle, and high maturity) averaged a dozen or more misconceptions, thus overshadowing substantive differences between maturity groups. However, maturity played an important role in the immediate recall of a Miranda advisement. Alarmingly, both low- and middle-maturity groups displayed less than one-third immediate recall. The high-maturity group performed better, but still failed to recall almost half of the Miranda concepts. The overall findings are discussed with respect to juvenile Miranda comprehension and reasoning.


Assessment | 2017

Feigned Adjudicative Incompetence: Testing Effectiveness of the ILK and SAMA With Jail Detainees.

Richard Rogers; Emily V. Robinson; Sarah A. Henry

Psychological assessments are highly dependent on the forthrightness and sincere efforts of examinees. In particular, evaluations in forensic settings must consider whether feigning or other response styles are utilized to intentionally distort the clinical presentation. The current study examines the effectiveness of the Inventory of Legal Knowledge (ILK) at detecting feigned incompetency within a sample of jail detainees. As an ancillary goal, several scales of the Standardized Assessment of Miranda Abilities were included in the same within-subjects simulation design. Results of the total ILK score raised concerns regarding the mischaracterization of genuine offenders as “suggestive of feigning.” Pending cross-validation, however, a Revised ILK proved highly effective, using a floor effect detection strategy. Although intended for Miranda-specific abilities, several detection strategies on the Standardized Assessment of Miranda Abilities appeared to be very promising within a broadened context of feigned incompetency.


Behavioral Sciences & The Law | 2016

An Examination of Juveniles' Miranda Abilities: Investigating Differences in Miranda Recall and Reasoning.

Richard Rogers; Jennifer A. Steadham; Rachel M. Carter; Sarah A. Henry; Eric Y. Drogin; Emily V. Robinson

Juvenile suspects are routinely expected to possess an accurate recall of written or oral Miranda warnings. This study addresses the Miranda-related comprehension recall and reasoning of legally involved juveniles. It is the first juvenile research to compare systematically two levels of complexity for Miranda warnings with the three modalities (oral, written, or combined) of administration. Unexpectedly, easily read written warnings marginally outperformed the combined modality. In order to examine Miranda reasoning, three juvenile groups were operationalized: impaired, questionable, and likely adequate. Predictably, the impaired and questionable groups possessed significantly lower verbal abilities than the likely-adequate reasoning group. In addition, the likely-adequate group exhibited the strongest appreciation of the adversarial context in which Miranda waiver decisions are rendered. The discussion addresses the marked disparities in Miranda recall from a total recall versus component-by-component understanding of Miranda rights. It also considers more generally how crucially important Miranda misconceptions might be remedied. Copyright


Assessment | 2017

Validity and Representative Data of the MRCI With Legally Involved Juveniles

Richard Rogers; Allyson J. Sharf; Rachel M. Carter; Sarah L. Henry; Margot M. Williams; Emily V. Robinson

Recognized for nearly four decades, most juvenile suspects waive their Miranda rights and almost immediately provide self-incriminating evidence. Miranda-specific measures were eventually developed to understand their capacities and limitations. With extensive revisions, the Miranda Rights Comprehension Instruments (MRCI) were normed and validated. Beyond reliability, the current study addresses the convergent and discriminant validity of the MRCI. In response to Frumkin and Sellbom’s criticism of the MRCI’s norms, the current research provides representative data on 245 legally involved juveniles with percentiles to facilitate the interpretation of MRCI data. The current investigation is also the first MRCI study to link directly Miranda comprehension (i.e., the knowing prong) to Miranda reasoning (i.e., the intelligent prong) of waiver decisions.


Assessment | 2017

Dodging Self-Incriminations An Examination of Feigned Miranda Abilities on the SAMA

Richard Rogers; Sarah A. Henry; Allyson J. Sharf; Emily V. Robinson; Margot M. Williams

Forensic assessments must always consider whether examinees are putting forth genuine effort or seeking to feign legally relevant incapacities. Miranda abilities are no exception when a putatively invalid Miranda waiver might result in the full suppression of an outright confession. Using a within-subjects simulation design, jail detainees were administered a representative Miranda warning and two Standardized Assessment of Miranda Abilities (SAMA) measures: Miranda Vocabulary Scale and Miranda Quiz. As expected, detainees have no difficulty in feigning severe deficits in their recall of the Miranda warning and portraying markedly impaired abilities on both SAMA measures. However, using floor-effect detection strategies, several feigning indicators proved effective at identifying likely feigned Miranda abilities. As an ancillary issue, the Inventory of Legal Knowledge was found to be very effective using both the traditional and revised scoring.


Law and Human Behavior | 2014

An investigation of implied Miranda waivers and Powell wording in a mock-crime study.

Nathan D. Gillard; Richard Rogers; Katherine R. Kelsey; Emily V. Robinson


Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment | 2015

Self-Report Measures of Psychopathy: What is their Role in Forensic Assessments?

Katherine R. Kelsey; Richard Rogers; Emily V. Robinson


Behavioral Sciences & The Law | 2013

Investigating the Effects of Repeated Miranda Warnings: Do They Perform a Curative Function on Common Miranda Misconceptions?

Richard Rogers; Chelsea E. Fiduccia; Emily V. Robinson; Jennifer A. Steadham; Eric Y. Drogin


Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment | 2015

Empathy Faking in Psychopathic Offenders: The Vulnerability of Empathy Measures

Emily V. Robinson; Richard Rogers


Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment | 2018

Detection of Feigned ADHD across Two Domains: The MMPI-2-RF and CAARS for Faked Symptoms and TOVA for Simulated Attention Deficits

Emily V. Robinson; Richard Rogers

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Richard Rogers

University of North Texas

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Sarah A. Henry

University of North Texas

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