“…For example, in a meta-analysis on the LS instruments, Olver et al (2014) found their predictive performance was significantly worse for U.S. offenders compared with those from other countries, including Canada. Moreover, in nondeveloper LSI-R validation studies in which performance with the area under the curve (AUC) was assessed, a predictive validity metric that is robust across different recidivism base rates (Smith, 1996), the area under the curve (AUC) ranged from a high of 0.51 to 0.74 (Barnoski, 2006;Barnoski and Aos, 2003;Caudy, Durso, and Taxman, 2013;Dahle, 2006;Davidson, 2012;Duwe, 2014;Duwe and Rocque, 2016;Fass, Heilbrun, DeMatteo, and Fretz, 2008;Flores, Lowenkamp, Smith, and Latessa, 2006;Folsom and Atkinson, 2007;Ostermann and Herrschaft, 2013;Ragusa-Salerno, Ostermann, and Thomas, 2013;Vose, Smith, and Cullen, 2013;Watkins, 2011;Zhang, 2014). In these 15 studies, which included more than 50 assessments of predictive validity in four countries outside the United States (Australia, Canada, China, and Germany) and four states within the United States (Iowa, Minnesota, New Jersey, and Washington), the average AUC for the LSI-R was 0.64.…”