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- "page_number": "54",
- "document_number": "499-2",
- "date": "11/23/21",
- "document_type": "court document",
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- "full_text": "Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 499-2 Filed 11/23/21 Page 54 of 15953\nLBAGmax2 Rocchio - Direct\n1 A. Sure. I think that certain things -- some psychologists use clinical judgment on whether or not a perpetrator's behaviors are considered grooming. But that certainly doesn't at all reference the scientific literature to determine what is and is not considered grooming. In addition, we also have data that's been provided by offenders themselves.\nIn terms of reliability and validity of these judgments, the validity in psychological science refers to the degree to which you are measuring this particular thing, what you think you're measuring. So for example, the degree to which there is significant overlap between what victims say they experience and what offenders say that they have done provides us with a measure of validity.\nThe degree to which different groups of individuals, whether that's groups of professionals or groups of victims agree in studies what it is that -- the process, what kinds of behaviors, what's been done to the victim, what kinds of behaviors are associated with the grooming process, to the extent those professionals agree, that's a measure of reliability. Because you're getting different studies, different groups, different samples where there's significant overlap in what this dynamic and what this concept is.\nMS. POMERANTZ: I want to turn to Page 974.\nQ. I want you to focus on the section under conclusions and the first two sentences, so \"Currently.\"\nSOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C. (212) 805-0300",
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- "content": "1 A. Sure. I think that certain things -- some psychologists use clinical judgment on whether or not a perpetrator's behaviors are considered grooming. But that certainly doesn't at all reference the scientific literature to determine what is and is not considered grooming. In addition, we also have data that's been provided by offenders themselves.\nIn terms of reliability and validity of these judgments, the validity in psychological science refers to the degree to which you are measuring this particular thing, what you think you're measuring. So for example, the degree to which there is significant overlap between what victims say they experience and what offenders say that they have done provides us with a measure of validity.\nThe degree to which different groups of individuals, whether that's groups of professionals or groups of victims agree in studies what it is that -- the process, what kinds of behaviors, what's been done to the victim, what kinds of behaviors are associated with the grooming process, to the extent those professionals agree, that's a measure of reliability. Because you're getting different studies, different groups, different samples where there's significant overlap in what this dynamic and what this concept is.\nMS. POMERANTZ: I want to turn to Page 974.\nQ. I want you to focus on the section under conclusions and the first two sentences, so \"Currently.\"",
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- "content": "SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C. (212) 805-0300",
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- "entities": {
- "people": [
- "MS. POMERANTZ"
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- "dates": [
- "11/23/21"
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- "additional_notes": "The document appears to be a court transcript, with a clear structure and formatting. The text is mostly printed, with no visible handwriting or stamps. The content discusses psychological concepts related to grooming and the reliability of judgments in psychological science."
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