2008
DOI: 10.1002/jip.75
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Incorporating context in linking crimes: an exploratory study of situational similarity and if‐then contingencies

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Cited by 43 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…If offense behavior changes as expertise develops, they would have expected to see the greatest similarity between offenses that occurred at approximately the same time-point in this development. As with a previous study using a smaller sample of juvenile serial stranger rapists (Woodhams, et al, 2008), there was no evidence for a strong negative correlation between temporal distance between pairs and behavioral consistency. Therefore it did not appear that offenses that were closer in time held more similarities than those that were further apart.…”
Section: Evidence For Expert/novice Differences From the Offending Besupporting
confidence: 77%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…If offense behavior changes as expertise develops, they would have expected to see the greatest similarity between offenses that occurred at approximately the same time-point in this development. As with a previous study using a smaller sample of juvenile serial stranger rapists (Woodhams, et al, 2008), there was no evidence for a strong negative correlation between temporal distance between pairs and behavioral consistency. Therefore it did not appear that offenses that were closer in time held more similarities than those that were further apart.…”
Section: Evidence For Expert/novice Differences From the Offending Besupporting
confidence: 77%
“…However, research to date has failed to identify greater behavioral consistency indicative of expertise (e.g., Grubin, Kelly, Brunsdon, & Britain, 2001;Woodhams, Hollin, & Bull, 2008;Woodhams & Labuschagne, 2012). Woodhams and Labuschagne (2012) examined the similarities of pairs of rapes that were either linked (committed by the same offender) or unlinked (committed by different offenders).…”
Section: Evidence For Expert/novice Differences From the Offending Bementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, the non-significant nature of these findings means that it can be concluded that there is little support for a substantive relationship between situational similarity and behavioral consistency in the current study. A similar conclusion was reached by Woodhams et al (2008), who also found little evidence for a relationship between behavioral consistency and situational similarity.…”
Section: Running Head: Linking Different Types Of Crime 23supporting
confidence: 69%
“…Furr & Funder, 2004) and subsequently applied in relation to behavioral case linkage (Woodhams, Hollin, & Bull, 2008). In terms of case linkage, it has been Running head: Linking Different Types of Crime 24 hypothesized that an offender's behavior will be most consistent when the situations that s/he encounters from one offence to the next are similar.…”
Section: Running Head: Linking Different Types Of Crime 23mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although several studies successfully identifi ed evidence of consistency across series of sexual crimes for linkage purposes (Bateman & Salfati, 2007;Canter, Heritage, Wilson, Davies, Kirby, Holden, McGinley, Hughes, Larkin, Martin, Tsang, Vaughan, & Donald, 1991;Grubin, Kelly, & Brunsdon, 2001;Salfati & Bateman, 2005;Santtila, Junkkila, & Sandnabba, 2005;Woodhams, Grant, & Price, 2007a), Woodhams, Hollin, and Bull (2008) found little support for consistency in cases of serial sexual assaults using if-then contingencies. Interestingly, fi ndings from sex offender and profi ling research point towards the same direction, suggesting that these offenders display both consistency and versatility depending on the situation, as well as the specifi c actions, observed.…”
Section: 'Crime-switching' Patterns In Sex Offendersmentioning
confidence: 96%