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Funny Feelings Focus of Department of Justice Workshop
For a day and a half at the end of June, passersby may have had a
hunch that something exciting was happening at Marymount University in
Arlington, Virginia. Or, more to the point, they might have had a gut feeling
that a group of august researchers were partnering with a who's who of the law
enforcement and intelligence communities to talk about the phenomenology of
"intuition"…because that's precisely what happened.
Dutiful readers of PSA may recall that within days of 9/11/01, APA's Science
Directorate put out a call to the research community to help us think through
the myriad ways that psychological science might be relevant to
counter-terrorism initiatives. When it became clear that there were a number of
issues relevant to security, intelligence and law enforcement operations that
might be informed by research, we began to nurture relationships with agencies
beyond just those that fund research to include those that might use such
research in applied settings. Inspired by then-Senior Scientist, Susan Brandon,
a series of workshops with the theme of "integrating theory and
practice" was born.
As with other workshops in this series, "The Nature and Influence of
Intuition in Law Enforcement: Integration of Theory and Practice" drew upon
experiential scenarios developed by staff of the Behavioral Science Unit at the
FBI Academy in Quantico, VA. The scenarios were distributed in advance of the
meeting to stimulate discussion during breakout sessions at the workshop. The
goal of the workshop was really to develop a research agenda. While a few of the
scientists were quite skeptical that the phenomenon of intuition existed (even
if it could be relabeled as "complex pattern recognition"), most
agreed it was worth examining further. And consistent with our experience in
pulling together these forums, those from the operational community and those
from the research community were quite willing to roll up their sleeves and
listen respectfully to divergent points of view. On the first day, the 50
participants were divided amongst six breakout groups to independently consider a
range of scenarios meant to help identify instances of
intuition. The scenarios, other background and summary information can be found here.
We then regrouped to discuss summaries of those breakout group discussions. APA
member Robert Kinscherff kindly agreed to serve as facilitator throughout the
workshop and was masterful at keeping the group on task. Susan Brandon, now the
Assistant Director of Social, Behavioral and Educational Sciences at the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), served as co-organizer of
the workshop and worked into the night to provide a summary PowerPoint
presentation for the following day.
Then, as a means to help identify a concrete research agenda, Bryan Vila, Chief
of the Crime Control and Prevention Research Division at the National Institute
of Justice within the Department of Justice (DoJ), compiled a list of questions
that may be used to stimulate programmatic activity, either at DoJ or within the
intelligence community. We expect that a more
detailed summary of the workshop will be published in a future edition of the
Law Enforcement Bulletin.
The assembled expertise included law enforcement, intelligence, and research
community participation from Italy, the United Kindom, Germany, and Canada as
well as the four corners of the United States, and we are extremely grateful to
NIJ and the FBI Academy's Behavioral Science Unit for jointly funding the
workshop and helping us to bring psychological research to bear on yet another
set of topical issues related to both are national and homeland security
interests.
View
web page about the workshop
View
Dr. Brandon's summary presentation [PPT 110K]
View
Dr. Vila's presentation [PPT 250K]
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