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748 KB

Extraction Summary

15
People
3
Organizations
1
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
2
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal document (forensic-psychiatric report)
File Size: 748 KB
Summary

This document is a page from a forensic-psychiatric report for Ghislaine Maxwell, filed on June 15, 2022. The report details that Maxwell, at her attorney's request, is being evaluated for her mental state and flight risk, and it discusses her complaints of unfair treatment and sleep deprivation in custody. The report cites academic research to argue that these conditions can lead to significant psychological distress, loss of cognitive flexibility, and diminished emotional intelligence.

People (15)

Name Role Context
Ghislaine Maxwell Subject of psychiatric report
Mentioned as Ms. Maxwell, a 59-year-old woman being evaluated to assess her mental state and risk of flight.
Liebling, A. Author
Co-author of a 2013 publication on prison suicide, fairness, and distress, cited in footnote 3.
Durie, L. Author
Co-author of a 2013 publication on prison suicide, fairness, and distress, cited in footnote 3.
Stiles, A. Author
Co-author of a 2013 publication on prison suicide, fairness, and distress, cited in footnote 3.
Tait, S. Author
Co-author of a 2013 publication on prison suicide, fairness, and distress, cited in footnote 3.
Honn, K. A. Author
Co-author of a 2019 publication on cognitive flexibility and sleep deprivation, cited in footnote 4.
Hinson, J. M. Author
Co-author of a 2019 publication on cognitive flexibility and sleep deprivation, cited in footnote 4.
Whitney, P. Author
Co-author of a 2019 publication on cognitive flexibility and sleep deprivation, cited in footnote 4.
Van Dongen, H. P. A. Author
Co-author of a 2019 publication on cognitive flexibility and sleep deprivation, cited in footnote 4.
Killgore, W. D. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.
Kahn-Greene, E. T. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.
Lipizzi, E. L. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.
Newman, R. A. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.
Kamimori, G. H. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.
Balkin, T. J. Author
Co-author of a 2008 publication on sleep deprivation and emotional intelligence, cited in footnote 5.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
American Psychiatric Association Professional organization
Cited in footnote 2 as the author of the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.).
American Psychiatric Publishing Publisher
Cited in footnote 2 as the publisher of the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.).
Willan Publisher
Cited in footnote 3 as the publisher of 'The effects of imprisonment'.

Timeline (1 events)

Ghislaine Maxwell was evaluated to assess her current mental state and risk of flight.

Locations (1)

Location Context
Location of American Psychiatric Publishing, mentioned in footnote 2.

Relationships (1)

Ghislaine Maxwell Professional (Client-Attorney) her attorney
The document states that Ms. Maxwell is being evaluated 'at the request of her attorney'.

Key Quotes (2)

"sleep deprivation resulted in a loss of cognitive flexibility through feedback blunting...sleep deprivation causes a fundamental problem with dynamic attentional control."
Source
— Honn, K. A., Hinson, J. M., Whitney, P., & Van Dongen, H. P. A. (2019) (Quoted from a research paper to support the argument about the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive functioning.)
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Quote #1
"Relative to baseline, sleep deprivation was associated with lower scores on Total EQ (decreased global emotional intelligence), Intrapersonal functioning (reduced self-regard, assertiveness, sense of independence, and self-actualization), Interpersonal functioning (reduced empathy toward others and quality of interpersonal relationships), Stress Management skills (reduced impulse control and difficulty with delay of gratification), and Behavioral Coping (reduced positive thinking and action orientation). Esoteric Thinking (greater reliance on formal superstitions and magical thinking processes) was increased."
Source
— Killgore, W. D., et al. (2008) (Summary of findings from a study on the effects of sleep deprivation, cited to illustrate the psychological impact.)
DOJ-OGR-00010522.jpg
Quote #2

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,414 characters)

Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 663 Filed 06/15/22 Page 76 of 77
Forensic-Psychiatric Report
Ghislaine Maxwell
FORMULATION
Ms. Maxwell is a 59-year-old Caucasian woman, who is being evaluated at the request of her attorney in order to assess her current mental state and risk of flight.
[REDACTED]
Ms. Maxwell has consistent described, and complained formally of, being subject to unfair and inconsistent treatment by correction officers and ongoing sleep deprivation throughout her incarceration. Research indicates that the experience of unfairness, disrespect, and a lack of safety significantly contributes to psychological distress in incarcerated individuals.³ Furthermore, recent research on the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive functioning states that “sleep deprivation resulted in a loss of cognitive flexibility through feedback blunting...sleep deprivation causes a fundamental problem with dynamic attentional control.”⁴ Furthermore, one study showed that:
Relative to baseline, sleep deprivation was associated with lower scores on Total EQ (decreased global emotional intelligence), Intrapersonal functioning (reduced self-regard, assertiveness, sense of independence, and self-actualization), Interpersonal functioning (reduced empathy toward others and quality of interpersonal relationships), Stress Management skills (reduced impulse control and difficulty with delay of gratification), and Behavioral Coping (reduced positive thinking and action orientation). Esoteric Thinking (greater reliance on formal superstitions and magical thinking processes) was increased.⁵
² American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing.
³ Liebling, A., Durie, L., Stiles, A., & Tait, S. (2013). Revisiting prison suicide: The role of fairness and distress. In The effects of imprisonment (pp. 229-251). Willan.
⁴ Honn, K. A., Hinson, J. M., Whitney, P., & Van Dongen, H. P. A. (2019). Cognitive flexibility: a distinct element of performance impairment due to sleep deprivation. Accident Analysis & Prevention, 126, 191-197.
⁵ Killgore, W. D., Kahn-Greene, E. T., Lipizzi, E. L., Newman, R. A., Kamimori, G. H., & Balkin, T. J. (2008). Sleep deprivation reduces perceived emotional intelligence and constructive thinking skills. Sleep medicine, 9(5), 517-526.
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