Police Psychology | Inertia: Video Post
by Gary S. Aumiller, Ph.D. ABPP
A principle of motion in Physics that can be applied to police work in a psychological way
by Gary S. Aumiller, Ph.D. ABPP
I was at a party this Labor Day weekend and I talked to a New York Port Authority Police Officer who was originally from Peru. His mom had cancer and I felt real bad for him. She was only given a few weeks to live, then he said that was 4 ½ years ago. When she was diagnosed, he went down to Peru and purchased a bunch of cancer eating beetles, bringing them back into the United States in an ant farm type of arrangement. The beetles have to be swallowed whole and alive, but seem to release some kind of toxin that kills cancer cells. The beetles were used in many different ancient medicines. The toxin actually burns you while going down and in the stomach. He said at first week you eat 10 beetles a day, and it increases to 80 beetles a day before it comes back to rest at 10. He said he didn’t know if it worked because they changed her diet and a whole bunch of things she was doing, but he said whether it is real or a placebo effect it definitely worked for his mother. I looked it up on the internet, and in fact there is a lot about it, even some studies. Seems it is only the male beetle that releases a toxin, it does offer a legit treatment for skin cancer, but the mythology is that it works with all cancers, sometimes. Whoa, 80 burning beetles! Alive! And let’s say 40 are female, so you are eating 40 that you don’t even have to!
My friend’s wife has cancer and they are not too positive about the prognosis. He changed the diet, she starting radiation and such, but he was considering cannabis oil as a treatment. When distilled in a certain way it has some studies that show it is effective, and there are articles on both sides of the effectiveness issue. It has also been used in ancient medicines. But of course, it is illegal except in California, and you can’t cross state lines to bring it back to New York. So we devised some ways to get it back and try it if needed. Not approved by the government for treatment, yet it sure sounds more pleasant than burning beetles from South America. Unfortunately, you are supposed to take the oil in suppositories, so you might get a “high” in the wrong end. When in desperation, you look for anything to cure the problem, but underlying this is a lack of trust in our government to regulate these types of things. A lack of trust in medicine also. Why is it we don’t trust medicine and the government to regulate these things anymore? Shouldn’t we do something about this problem? (more…)
by Doug Gentz, Ph.D.
All of us have a complex, pervasive, extensive network of habits that we might as well think of as our “Inner Zombie.” It’s responsible for most of our behavior. That turns out to be a good thing because most things we do are best done “mindlessly” and automatically. Imagine how little we could get done if we had to deliberately figure out or remember how to walk, talk, or drive our cars. In general, learning is just acquiring new and useful habits. We like to get them out of the initially awkward and conscious stage and turn them over to our “inner zombie” for execution as soon as possible. When your Inner Zombie took over the job of lining up your thumbs below the slide of your Glock, your range scores probably improved.
At a neurological level habits are just synaptic connections between nerves. The more a habitual behavior is performed, the stronger the synaptic connection (and the more likely it is to be performed again). This is the physiological fact that leads to the first axiom of learning theory: All habits are permanent. (more…)
Robert John Zagar PhD MPH and Brandon Northern
Current ways of finding challenges like trauma and stress miss 61% of at-risk. Conventional approaches of interviews, background checks, and short paper and pencil tests are less than chance accurate and comparable to a coin toss. This costs billions of U.S. dollars in work productivity. This is money that can be used for education, and making communities, workplaces, and the armed forces safer. Finding trauma and post-traumatic stress are crucial to treating it, given that many estimates suggest one in five police officers and even more corrections officers suffer chronically from these two issues. It is an occupational hazard built into the job.
Post-traumatic stress (PTSD) is experienced at many points of life, in any setting. Understanding that it can be diagnosed accurately and treated is crucial to keeping police officers healthy and functioning at peak levels. Understanding PTSD requires comprehending trauma. To do that it’s important to distinguish between acute and chronic trauma. (more…)
by Geoff Dean, Ph.D. (Australia) and Gary S. Aumiller, Ph.D. (U.S.A.)
What causes people to shoot up a gay nightclub? Or, shoot up a holiday party of co-workers or drive a truck into the middle of a crowd celebrating independence day killing a lot of children? Or shoot innocent people going to work or attending college classes. We want to believe it is the Islamic faith and gaining the love of virgins in the afterlife. Not quite that simple.
AS MOST THINGS IN LIFE, MASS MURDERS ARE A COMBINATION OF A NUMBER OF DIFFERENT FACTORS. Some of them are through the filter of mental illness. He was described as unhinged and unstable. His reality is going to be very different from a normal person because of his mental illness. Omar Mateen, the Orlando shooter, was a steroid user, abusive and secretly gay. Many mass killers have at least some mental health issue, were damaged when they were younger, or are desperate enough to sacrifice themselves to make an impact in a world they will never see. Their view of the world is skewed, affected by their mental state. Add to that some of the propaganda set forth by groups like ISIS. The murderer may be open to different interpretations of the world, even though it is not so bad for him. Extreme thinking is not too far for Omar to go as he swore vengeance on Americans because of airstrikes in Libya and Iraq. The guy who drove the truck into a crowd of civilians in Nice, Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhel, was seriously depressed and lonely, and this stimulated him to have a different filter for his perceptions. What is important is that filter for the perceptions forms their interpretation of the world, and the extremeness that they think they face in their daily life. It determines the belief system they use to organize their world. It determines the perceptions of the world as a terrible place, and justifies terrible acts like mass murder. How are these perceptions formed? (more…)