What are the components of acceptability for techniques in use of force? - Answer
Tactical, medical, and legal acceptability
Physiological changes that take place as a result of high stress? - Answer Visual
dominance, change in vision, change in motor skills, and change in cognitive
ability.
What sense has dominance under high stress? - Answer Vision
What are some examples of changes in vision? - Answer Tunnel vision, depth
perception, color vision, peripheral vision, night vision
Fine motor skills peak at? - Answer 115 bpm
Complex motor skills peak at? - Answer 145 bpm
Gross motor skills? - Answer Remain until body shuts down
Inverted U Law - Answer The heart rate goes up and the motor skills go down
Hicks Law - Answer The more techniques you know, the slower the response.
ATP/PC - Answer fast burning fuel source. 100% in 10-15 seconds
Lactic Acid - Answer intermediate fuel source 45-60% in 45 seconds
, Aerobic System - Answer after 90 seconds. Cardio/respiratory conditioning
determine how long he/she can fight
Effective responses to stress - Answer Combat breathing, training, physical
conditioning, good nutrition/sleep habits, and the when and then game
Verbals help with ___________ ___________ - Answer Combat breathing
In training, it is important to? - Answer Practice the way you want to play
The objective of control techniques is? - Answer To stop resistive behavior
If compliance is achieved? - Answer Force MUST stop
Liabilities for use of Force - Answer Criminal, Civil (both State and Federal) and
Departmental (written, suspension, demotion, and termination), loss of credibility
with peers, and personal morale sacrifice
What is the primary priority in a physical encounter? - Answer Officer safety
Principles to controlling resistive behavior - Answer Pain compliance, mental
stunning, balance displacement, distraction techniques, and motor dysfunction
(Charlie horse)
Common resistive behavior encounters - Answer During handcuffing, passive
resistance, during escort or transport, and active aggression