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SB-3 Juvenile Sex Offenders -
Inventory to Assess Sex Offenders
NCJ Number: 191197
Title: Computerization and Validation of an Inventory
to Assess Adult and Juvenile Sex Offenders, Final Report
Author: Raymond A. Knight
Corporate Author: Brandeis University
415 South Street
Waltham, MA 02154
Sponsor: National Institute of Justice US Dept of
Justice
810 Seventh Street NW
Washington, DC 20531
Sale: Brandeis University
415 South Street
Waltham, MA 02154
Paper Reproduction Sales National Institute of
Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000 Department F
Rockville, MD 20849
Date Published: 2001
Page Count: 300
Country of Origin: United States
Language: English
Grant Number: 94-IJ-CX-0049
Annotation: This report focuses on the reliability
and validity of an instrument for assessing sex
offenders.
Abstract: The Multidimensional Assessment of Sex and
Aggression (MASA) was initially created to supplement
the often poorly represented information in the archival
records of sex offenders and to provide sufficient data
to classify adult sex offenders. The MASA's construction
involved the specification of multiple domains that
research had revealed to be important in the assessment
of sexual aggression. Its development also involved the
creation of an extensive item pool covering all these
domains, the rating by experienced clinicians of the
appropriateness of items for each domain, the selection
of the most suitable items for each domain, the
rewriting of the chosen items to give them maximum
relevance, and further steps through testing and
re-testing. The MASA has now undergone four revisions to
expand the breadth of its assessment, simplify its
language to make it appropriate for juveniles,
and computerize its administration. Recent reliability
and validity analyses of the MASA used a wide variety of
samples. These samples included college students,
community noncriminals, criminals not convicted of sex
offenses, and adult and juvenile sex offenders. Results
revealed that the continued reliability and cross-sample
stability of factor structures and the intercorrelations
across the scales suggested that this inventory had
promise as a useful assessment for sex offenders.
Findings suggested that the MASA could be developed into
a useful clinical assessment tool, especially for
identifying treatment needs and for offender
classification. Such a development would be the first
step to addressing a significant gap in the assessment
of sexual aggression. Figures, tables, appended
instrument and background information, and 81 references
(Author abstract modified)
Thesaurus Term: Criminology ; Computer aided
operations ; Testing and measurement ; Offender
classification ; Sex offenders ; Psychological
evaluation ; Recidivism prediction ; Sex offender
profiles ; Instrument validation ; NIJ final report
The NIJ Research Review
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