1) When one aspect of consciousness is symbolically substituted for another it is referred to as sublimation. a. True b. False 2) Psychotherapy holds that the frequency of any behaviour can be increased or decreased through reward, punishment, and/or association with other stimuli. a. True b. False 3) In the case of R. v. Swain the Supreme Court of Canada deemed unconstitutional the automatic and indefinite detention for those found legally insane. a. True b. False 4) Neurosis refers to disorders of the mind or of the emotions. Such disorders involve anxiety, phobia, or other abnormal behaviour. a. True b. False 5) A finding of not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder (NCRMD) acknowledges that the accused committed the offence but finds that the accused suffered from a mental disorder that made him or her incapable of appreciating the nature and quality of his or her actions or that the actions were wrong. a. True b. False 6) A psychopath (also called a sociopath) is a person with a personality disorder, especially one manifested in aggressively antisocial behaviour, and who is lacking in empathy. a. True b. False 7) Psychiatric criminology, also known as forensic psychiatry, envisions a complex set of drives and motives operating from hidden recesses deep within the personality to determine behaviour. a. True b. False 8) Behaviour theory is a psychological perspective positing that individual behaviour that is rewarded will increase in frequency and behaviour that is punished will decrease. a. True b. False 9) Modelling Theory, a form of social learning theory, asserts that people learn how to act by observing others. a. True b. False 10) Psychological profiling is based on the belief that almost any form of conscious behaviour (including behaviour engaged in by the offender during a criminal episode) is symptomatic of an individual’s personality. a. True b. False