Criminal psychologists are people who are, by definition, experts or professionals in the study of the wills, thoughts, intentions, and reactions of criminals and all that partakes in the criminal behavior. In other words, criminal psychologists study the minds and behaviors of offenders. What exactly they do and where they work depends on their employer, but it can range from tasks such as helping law enforcement to providing testimony in court and more. Studying individual criminals, their behavior and their minds doesn’t require much use of tools or other technological advances as other jobs might deem necessary. In certain cases these psychologists might look at brain screenings but they themselves …show more content…
Additionally, they may testify in court for a variety of reasons such as deciding which parent would be best fit to care for their child in a custody hearing, or work with witnesses of a certain crime to develop a clearer picture so long as they conclude the witness is in fact a reliable source. While the duties of a criminal psychologist may vary depending on their employer, the most common places for people of this profession to work are in court or office settings. Overall, while there are different specialties in the field of criminal psychology, an average day might include research whether it be of a case or an offender's life history, performing assessments and interviews, or providing expert testimony in …show more content…
Some of the main technological advancements we use today along with cameras are devices such as polygraph machines (lie detectors), or scanners like neuroimaging (brain scanners). While criminal psychologists aren’t the ones performing these tests or using this technology directly, it’s the studies and information gathered from them that gives them something to work with. Polygraph machines tend to be less accurate than brain scans which is why that is the direction most psychologists go, but from them feeds a lot of information about the person at hand. Neuroimaging presents how a person’s brain reacts based on certain pictures, sounds, (etc.) which psychologists then use to determine whether the patient has some kind of serious disorder. Certain parts of the brain will light up according to pleasure or pain and along with other feelings. When the person is presented with these images, neuroimaging tests to see if their brain reacts how it should accordingly. We’ve come a long way since 1888 meaning a safer, healthier future for us and the people we care