Twenty-one Mental Models That Can Change Policing

Twenty-one Mental Models That Can Change Policing

A Framework for Using Data and Research for Overcoming Cognitive Bias

Mitchell, Renee J.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

09/2021

210

Dura

Inglês

9780367481476

15 a 20 dias

453

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Introduction: What is a Mental Model and How Does It Help Policing; PART I: How We Think; Mental Model #1: System 1 and 2; Mental Model #2: Cognitive Bias; Mental Model #3: First Principles Thinking; The Mental Models in Practice I: Mental Models 1-3; Part II: How We Think About Math; Mental Model #4: False Linear Thinking; Mental Model #5: Binary Percent Changes; Mental Model #6: Second Order Thinking; The Mental Models in Practice II: Mental Models 4-6; PART III: How Things Concentrate; Mental Model #7: Pareto Principle; Mental Model #8: The Law of Crime concentration; Mental Model #9: Felonious Few; The Mental Models in Practice III: Mental Models 7-9; PART IV: How Things Vary; Mental Model #10: Distributions; Mental Model #11: Law of Large numbers; Mental Model #12: Regression to the Mean; The Mental Models in Practice IV: Mental Models 10-12; PART V: How to Determine Causality; Mental Model #13: Correlation is not Causation; Mental Model #14: Causal Inference; Mental Model #15: Bayesian (Probabilistic) Reasoning; The Mental Models in Practice V: Mental Models 13-15; Part VI: How to Think Scientifically; Mental Model #16: Peer Review Your Perspectives; Mental Model #17: The Scientific Method; Mental Model #18: Evidence-based Practices; The Mental Models in Practice VI: Mental Models 16-18; PART VII: How to Make Decisions; Mental Model #19: Targeting, Testing, and Tracking; Mental Model #20: Harm Indexes; Mental Model #21: Decision-making Models; The Mental Models in Practice VII: Mental Models 19-21; PART VIII: How to Apply it All; Conclusion: How the Twenty-one Mental Models Can Improve Policing and Reduce Cognitive Bias; Mental Model Method: How it all Fits Together Mental Models 1-21; Notes
Mental Model;Mental Models;Follow;Police leadership;Data Sets;Evidence-based policing;Street Segment;What Works;Hold;Policing research;Maryland Scientific Methods Scale;Law enforcement;Lower Control Limits;Pareto Principle;Field Training Officer;Police Executives;Crime Counts;Treatment Hot Spots;Hot Spots Policing;Binary Comparisons;Statistical Process Control Charts;Cognitive Bias;Random Assignment;Sentencing Guidelines;Law Of Large Numbers;Em Data;Crime Data;Crime Harm;High Harm;Long Term Problem Solving;CISD