The National Center for Victims of Crime is pleased to provide the slides used in our August 4, 2015 Webinar, The Neurobiology of Sexual Assault.

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The National Center for Victims of Crime is pleased to provide the slides used in our August 4, 2015 Webinar, The Neurobiology of Sexual Assault. Please be advised that these materials are provided through the generosity of our presenter faculty. All copyright laws apply to the proper use and crediting of these materials.

THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF SEXUAL ASSAULT Rebecca Campbell, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Michigan State University.

Today s Presentation RECAP: Describe brain & body reaction to trauma RECAP: Describe brain & body reaction to sexual assault DISCUSS IN DEPTH: Counter-intuitive victim behavior Memory gaps & inconsistent statements False reports Q&A and discussion

Introduction to the Neurobiology of Trauma

Our Story Begins Here One inch, almond-shaped

Two Key Functions PROCESSES EMOTIONAL REACTIONS PROCESSES MEMORIES

Two Key Functions PROCESSES EMOTIONAL REACTIONS PROCESSES MEMORIES THREATS TO THE SURVIVAL OF THE ORGANISM

Two Key Functions PROCESSES EMOTIONAL REACTIONS

Emotional Processing of Traumatic E HPA Axis Amygdala Hypothalmus Hypothalamus Balances body following stress by releasing of various hormones/chemicals Pituitary Gland Adrenal Glands Kidneys SOURCE: Southwick et al., 2005

Emotional Processing of Traumatic E Catecholamines: Fight or flight response Amygdala Hypothalmus Hypothalamus Cortisol: Energy available Opioids: Prevent pain Oxytocin: Promotes good feelings Pituitary Gland Adrenal Glands Kidneys SOURCE: Southwick et al., 2005

Two Key Functions PROCESSES MEMORIES

How Memory Usually Works

How Memory Usually Works

BUT... Trauma Hormones Mess This Up

The Neurobiology of Sexual Assault

What Happens During A Sexual Assault Amygdala Detects Threat Activates Hypothalamus HPA Axis Kicks In Hormonal Flood Impaired Rational Thought Hyper/Jangled Flat Affect/No Emotion Laughing/Joking SOURCE: Banks, 2002; Southwick et al.,

What Happens During A Sexual Assault Amygdala Detects Threat Activates Hypothalamus HPA Axis Kicks In Hormonal Flood Can Trigger a Complete Shut Down (TONIC IMMOBILITY) SOURCE: Banks, 2002; Southwick et al.,

What Happens During A Sexual Assault Increased Stress Hormones Impaired Functioning in Hippocampus Memories Fragmented Memory Recall Can Be Slow & Difficult Events of the Assault CAN Be Recalled Accurately SOURCE: Koss et al., 1995, 1996; Roozendaal et al., 2009; Rubin et al.,

What Happens During A Sexual Assault Increased Stress Hormones Impaired Functioning in Hippocampus Memories Fragmented Memory Recall Can Be Slow & Difficult Accurate, If It Gets Encoded Events of the Assault CAN Be Recalled Accurately

What Happens During A Sexual Assault Increased Stress Hormones Impaired Functioning in Hippocampus Memories Fragmented Memory Recall Can Be Slow & Difficult Alcohol Interferes with Encoding Events of the Assault CAN Be Recalled Accurately SOURCE: Bisby et al., 2009; Bisby et al., 2010

Alcohol & Memory Processing Encoding = Organizing sensory information SOURCE: Bisby et al., 2009; Bisby et al., 2010

Alcohol & Memory Processing Encoding = Organizing sensory information Alcohol impairs encoding of CONTEXT details Time, Place, Physical Scene Events in Sequence SOURCE: Bisby et al., 2009; Bisby et al., 2010

Alcohol & Memory Processing Encoding = Organizing sensory information But encoding of SENSORY details still working Five Senses Still Gathering Information SMELL in Particular SOURCE: Bisby et al., 2009; Bisby et al., 2010

Smell? Yes, Smell THE LIMBIC SYSTEM

Smell? Yes, Smell Guess What s Below the Limbic System? THE LIMBIC SYSTEM

Smell? Yes, Smell Guess What s Below the Limbic System? OLFACTORY BULB THE LIMBIC SYSTEM

Bottom Line on Alcohol & Memory CONTEXT details may not be encoded and what is encoded, will be fragmented SENSORY details might still be encoded probably also fragmented, but more details to uncover

Implications & Take Home Lessons

#1: Counter-Intuitive Victim Behavior

She was laughing about it with her friends #1: Counter-Intuitive Victim Behavior She called him afterwards She s acting like it s no big deal

HPA Axis Activation HPA Axis activation elevated for 96 hours post-assault (AND whenever memory is re-activated) Flat affect, strange emotions, emotional swings Irritable, argumentative, and difficulty concentrating Headaches, body pain, stomach/gi distress Increased alcohol & drug use (self medicating behaviors) Compromised decision making (esp. relationships & sexuality)

HPA Axis Activation HPA Axis activation elevated for 96 hours postassault (AND whenever memory is re-activated) Flat affect, strange emotions, emotional swings OH!!! So that s why we see Counter- Intuitive Victim Behavior!! Irritable, argumentative, and difficulty concentrating Headaches, body pain, stomach/gi distress Increase alcohol & drug use (self medicating behaviors) Compromised decision making (esp. relationships & sexuality)

HPA Axis Activation HPA Axis activation elevated for 96 hours postassault (AND whenever memory is re-activated) Flat affect, strange emotions, emotional swings THESE ARE NEUROBIOLOGICA L SIGNS OF TRAUMA!! Irritable, argumentative, and difficulty concentrating Headaches, body pain, stomach/gi distress Increase alcohol & drug use (self medicating behaviors) Compromised decision making (esp. relationships & sexuality)

All I wanted to hear was, I m so sorry this happened to you. It s gonna be ok and I ll help you, whatever you need. No one ever said that to me. No, everyone said I wasn t acting right. Like there s a right way to do this, a right way to be a victim. And I wasn t doing it right.

Implications: Victims Emotions & Behaviors When victims don t behave right law enforcement are less likely to believe victims... Accuse victims of lying/making false reports Do not follow-up on case/investigation Do not submit rape kit for testing Do not refer the case to prosecutors SOURCE: Campbell et al., 2014; Shaw, 2014

Take Home: Victims Emotions & Behaviors Provide caring emotional support bring HPA down Provide informational support give options & give victims time to make decisions Connect victims to advocacy services by name For providers/practitioners TRAINING

#2: Memory Gaps & Inconsistent Statements

#2: Memory Gaps & Inconsistent Statements The interviews don t completely line up There s chunks that are just missing

Memory Fragmentation Storage of sensory pieces & cognitive interpretation of events is fragmented Each telling will be (slightly) different depending on which pieces are recalled HPA activation makes retrieval harder SOURCE: Koss et al., 1995, 1996; Roozendaal et al., 2009; Rubin et al.,

Memory Fragmentation Storage of sensory pieces & cognitive interpretation of events is fragmented Each telling OH!!! will be So (slightly) that s why different depending on which pieces are recalled there s gaps & variations!!! HPA activation makes retrieval harder

Implications: Victims Memory Neurobiological response to trauma makes memory consolidation difficult Story may come out fragmented or sketchy Expect variations & inconsistencies across interviews Misinterpreted as evasiveness or lying The content of the memory is accurate, just may take some time and patience for it to come together

Take Home Lessons: Victims Memory Sleep helps memory consolidation let them sleep! Interview in a way that is consistent with the underlying architecture of the memory!

Victims Memory: What WON T Work The WHO-WHAT-WHERE-WHEN-WHY questions Too narrowly-framed Too closed-ended Seek specific details that are harder for victims to access (esp! if alcohol-facilitated sexual assault)

WHO, WHAT, WHERE WHEN, WHY

Victims Memory: What WON T Work REID interviewing methods Also too narrowly-focused Also too closed-ended Was developed for suspect interrogation Does not promote trust & disclosure

Tends to capture peripheral details & goes over & over those details (missing huge chunks of the memory)

Victims Memory: What WON T Work SCAN (scientific content analysis) & any other polygraph / truth telling device methods No scientific evidence it promotes recall Increases HPA axis activation recall MORE difficult Does not promote trust & disclosure

Increases HPA axis activation fragmented, piecemeal recall without much context

Victims Memory: What WILL Work Trauma-informed interviewing methods Child Forensic Interviewing Cognitive Interviewing Forensic Experiential Trauma Interviewing Go back in time to that day. Set the stage. Use the senses. SOURCE: Fisher & Geiselman, 2010; Strand, 2012

OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS SENSORY-BASED QUESTIONS

Can You Help Me Understand What You re Able to Remember About Your Experience?

#3: False Reports

I see them hedge, making it up as they go along. #3: False Reports No one would act like that if it s true. They can t get their story straight.

The stuff they say makes no sense. So no, I don t always believe them, and yeah, I let them know that. Then they say, never mind, I don t want to do this. Ok, fine. Complainant Refused to Prosecute. Case closed. Sex Crimes Unit Detective, 15 Years Experience

False Reports Law enforcement personnel say that that 50% + of reported sexual assault are false RESEARCH: 2-8% of reported assaults are false Well-designed research studies Data from multiple sources (victims, witnesses, suspects) Following up investigative leads SOURCE: Lonsway, Archambault, & Lisak, 2009

False Reports Law enforcement personnel say that that 50% + of reported sexual assault are false RESEARCH: 2-8% of reported assaults are false Well-designed research studies Data from multiple sources (victims, WOW!! witnesses, suspects) Why are % so different? Following up investigative leads SOURCE: Lonsway, Archambault, & Lisak, 2009

Focus Group Research With Police

Focus Group Research With Police I see them hedge, making it up as they go along. No one would act like that if it s true. They can t get their story straight.

I see them hedge, making it up as they go along. Misinterpreting Signs of Trauma No one would act like that if it s true. They can t get their story straight.

So wait a minute. You mean what we re seeing isn t bullsh*t? I ve always believed it was bullsh*t... Well, how bout that. Real trauma looks like bullsh*t. Sex Crimes Unit Detective, 8 Years Experience

Focus Group Research With Police Misinterpreting Signs of Trauma Negative Attitudes & Beliefs Resource Depletion & Burnout Vicarious Trauma

Focus Group Research With Police Misinterpreting Signs of Trauma? Negative Attitudes & Beliefs Resource Depletion & Burnout Vicarious Trauma

Focus Group Research With Police Misinterpreting Signs of Trauma? Negative Attitudes & Beliefs Resource Depletion & Burnout Vicarious Trauma

Take Home Lessons: False Reports Sufficient resources for sex crimes units/staff Caring for practitioners Heal the Healers Transforming trauma workshops In-office wellness sessions Workplace healing

Conclusions

Concluding Thoughts Neurobiological reasons for victims behavior New research findings can help improve investigations and victims health outcomes We can USE this findings to create a

Concluding Thoughts Neurobiological reasons for victims behavior New research findings can help improve investigations and victims health outcomes We can USE these findings to create a VICTIM-CENTERED TRAUMA-INFORMED OFFENDER-FOCUSED Community Response to Sexual Assault

THANK YOU!! Questions & Discussion rmc@msu.edu National Criminal Justice Reference Service www.ncjrs.gov YouTube Video of Training http://youtu.be/gtwd1xjrhno