Publications by authors named "Raymond Chip Tafrate"

Article Synopsis
  • The article focuses on how criminal justice practitioners are using collaborative communication methods, particularly motivational interviewing (MI), which is essential for core correctional practices.
  • The Response Style Screening Questionnaire (RSSQ) was developed and validated to assess practitioners' alignment with MI practices through three studies, examining its structure, reliability, and validity.
  • Findings indicated that the RSSQ identified four communication styles, with two aligning with MI practices and two that are not, and highlighted correlations between these styles and practitioners' work orientations.
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This article describes two studies concerning the development of a new measure of criminal thinking, the CriminogenicThinking Profile (CTP), influenced by the construct of psychopathy, and traditional models of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). An experimental item pool based on verbalizations from offenders served as the pilot version of the instrument. Principal components analysis of the items resulted in a 62-item, eight-factor scale that was internally consistent.

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The increasing prominence of the construct of readiness to change in the field of substance abuse treatment has led to the development of instruments designed to assess the construct. We examined the psychometric properties of one such instrument, the Stages of Change Readiness and Treatment Eagerness Scale (SOCRATES), in a sample of treatment-seeking, active duty, U.S.

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Anger is a basic emotion, experienced by almost all human beings in response to the unwanted and unexpected behavior of others. Yet, there is little consensus as to which characteristics may differentiate people who experience normal versus exaggerated or pathological anger reactions. We examined the self-reported characteristics of specific anger episodes in 93 community adults who were high (HTA) or low (LTA) on trait anger.

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