The use of facet action system theory in crime scene analysis and suspect interviewing
The use of facet action system theory in crime scene analysis and suspect interviewing
Facet action system theory (FAST) is a unified approach able to assist in the investigation of a range of crimes. The theoretical backdrop and methodological foundations of FAST are thoroughly reviewed and studies which have successfully made use of the framework to classify offences and offenders are considered. Particular attention is given to the way in which the model has been applied to organise actions in the domains of homicide, arson and sexual offending by subjecting multifarious crime scene behaviours to types of multidimensional scaling. In addition, the findings of a recent study testing the functional consistency across time and context of FAST within the same individual are discussed. The results indicate that the majority of individuals are true to modal type and suggest that even though the independent behaviours describing a particular mode may change across situation and time, the underlying psychological function of each mode remains the same. Given these findings, a promising avenue for future research lies in the application of the model to inform the interviewing of suspects and in testing for similarities and differ
ences across the various forms of sexual violence.
21-30
Neville, Lucy
a8e9c5d1-bcd7-4718-bef4-301becabfaab
Miller, Sarah
9512a2a1-9384-4c38-b3df-e2bb9fc3a75a
June 2007
Neville, Lucy
a8e9c5d1-bcd7-4718-bef4-301becabfaab
Miller, Sarah
9512a2a1-9384-4c38-b3df-e2bb9fc3a75a
Neville, Lucy and Miller, Sarah
(2007)
The use of facet action system theory in crime scene analysis and suspect interviewing.
Issues in Forensic Psychology, 8, .
Abstract
Facet action system theory (FAST) is a unified approach able to assist in the investigation of a range of crimes. The theoretical backdrop and methodological foundations of FAST are thoroughly reviewed and studies which have successfully made use of the framework to classify offences and offenders are considered. Particular attention is given to the way in which the model has been applied to organise actions in the domains of homicide, arson and sexual offending by subjecting multifarious crime scene behaviours to types of multidimensional scaling. In addition, the findings of a recent study testing the functional consistency across time and context of FAST within the same individual are discussed. The results indicate that the majority of individuals are true to modal type and suggest that even though the independent behaviours describing a particular mode may change across situation and time, the underlying psychological function of each mode remains the same. Given these findings, a promising avenue for future research lies in the application of the model to inform the interviewing of suspects and in testing for similarities and differ
ences across the various forms of sexual violence.
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Published date: June 2007
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Local EPrints ID: 493088
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493088
ISSN: 1468-4756
PURE UUID: baf20ae7-9ca4-4f8d-a215-a68adace21b7
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Date deposited: 22 Aug 2024 17:05
Last modified: 23 Aug 2024 02:07
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Author:
Lucy Neville
Author:
Sarah Miller
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