“…See Figure 1 for a comparison of the current ways contrasted with MLIT. There are paper-and-pencil tests, interviews and judgment, medical exams, and the modern MLIT: (a) the paper-and-pencil, violence risk tests, have a mean sensitivity and specificity of .73 [as contrasted with a miss rate of 27%] (Quinsey, Harris, Rice, and Courmier, 1998, 2015Hanson and Thornton, 2000;Monahan et al, 2000); the background-credit checks hit rate is .25 [as compared with a miss rate of 75%] (Quinsey, Harris, Rice, and Cormier, 1998;2015); (b) the interviews and judgment, have an average hit rate of .46 (as opposed to a miss rate of .54) [Sepejak, Menzies, Webster, and Jensen, 1983;Lidz, 1993;Monahan, 1996;Rice, Harris, and Quinsey, 1996]; (c) in 2,200 medical and psychiatric exams, there is a mean .49 hit rate [versus a miss rate of 51%, which exceeds chance] (Hsieh, Gutman, and Haliscak, 2000;Loke, Liaw, Tiong, Ling, and Chang, 2002;Madan and Harley, 2003;Bueno-de-Mesquita, Nuyten, Wesseling, van Tinteren, Linn, and van de Vijver, 2009;Zagar, Kovach, Basile, Hughes, Grove, et al, 2013); and (d) the Standard Predictor of Violence Potential, along with the MMPI-2/A, have a combined specificity and sensitivity for deception, mental illness, substance abuse and violence of 0.97 (Zagar and Grove, 2010;Zagar, Kovach, Basile, Hughes, Grove, et al, 2013) for homicidal, overdosing-substance-abusing, sex-offending and suicide-completers.…”