•Clinical-Forensic Psychology: Very similar to clinical psychology. Clients here are not only suffering from some type of mental problem, but their issues are of importance to legal decision making as well.
• Developmental Psychology: Deals w/ juveniles, the elderly, and the law. Focus on policy making rather than treatment of those with mental problems. •Social Psychology: Concerned with how jurors interact and arrive at a group decision. •Cognitive Psychology: Closely associated w/ social psychology subfield, but looks more into how people make decisions in legal cases. •Criminal Investigative Psychology: Police psychology, criminal profiling and psychological autopsies. Experts may choose to conduct research and/or work closely in analyzing the minds of criminal suspects.