A signal detection theory analysis of racial and ethnic disproportionality in the referral and substantiation processes of the US child welfare services system Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • AbstractSignal detection theory (SDT) was developed to analyze the behavior of a single judge but also can be used to analyze decisions made by organizations or other social systems. SDT quantifies the ability to distinguish between signal and noise by separating accuracy of the detection system from response biasthe propensity to over-warn (too many false positives) or under-warn (too many misses). We apply SDT techniques to national and state-level data sets to analyze the ability of the child welfare services systems to detect instances of child maltreatment. Blacks have higher rates of referral and the system is less accurate for them than for Whites or Hispanics. The incidence of false positivesreferrals leading to unsubstantiated findingsis higher for Blacks than for other groups, as is the incidence of false negativeschildren for whom no referral was made but who are in fact neglected or abused. The rate of true positiveschildren for whom a referral was made and for whom the allegation was substantiatedis higher for Blacks. Values of d (signal strength) are roughly the same for Whites, Blacks, and Hispanics but there are pronounced group differences in C (a measure of the location of the decision threshold). Analyses show that the child welfare services system treats Blacks differently from Hispanics and Whites in ways that cannot be justified readily in terms of objective measures of group differences. This study illustrates the potential for JDM techniques such as SDT to contribute to understanding of system-level decision making processes.

published proceedings

  • JUDGMENT AND DECISION MAKING

author list (cited authors)

  • Mumpower, J. L., & McClelland, G. H.

citation count

  • 3

complete list of authors

  • Mumpower, Jeryl L||McClelland, Gary H

publication date

  • March 2014