Psychopathy, Antisocial Personality Disorder and offending behaviour- Part 1 Flashcards
What does autonomic abnormalities come under?
Who made the PCL-R tool?
What does the PCL-R stand for?
What is it an assessment for?
What kind of effort is it?
Neurobiological abnormalities.
Robert Hare.
Psychopathy checklist revised.
Psychopathy.
Multidisciplinary team effort.
How are psychopaths like at the interpersonal level?
How are psychopaths like at an affective level?
How are psychopaths like at a behavioural level?
When do psychopaths feel remorse?
What is shallow affect?
Arrogant, superficial, grandiose and manipulative.
Lack empathy, guilt or remorse and shallow effect.
Irresponsible, impulsive and thrill seeking.
When caught.
Feeling no emotions when you expect someone too.
Psychopathy assessment (PCL-R):
How many items are on this scale?
How is each item scored?
Where does information inputted into this assessment come from?
How long should the information used should have been collected for?
0 to 2;
- 0 = not present.
- 1 = partially present.
- 2 = fully present.
Prison files + semi-structured interviews.
Throughout their life- is a developmental disorder which starts young.
Continuation from information about the PCL-R:
What is the highest score you can get?
What is the cut off point (threshold) to say someone has psychopathy in the UK?
How should you score?
25.
Score on a continuum of severity- rather than saying once you reach the threshold, you have psychopathy.
Continuation from information about the PCL-R:
What happened to the PCL-R?
How many factors are there?
How many facets are there?
What goes under factor 1?
What goes under factor 2?
Changed after studies were conducted.
2; Factor 1 + factor 2.
Interpersonal (facet 1) + Affective (facet 2).
Lifestyle (facet 3) + Antisocial (facet 4).
Continuation from information about the PCL-R:
What is facet 1?
What is facet 2?
What is facet 3?
What is facet 4?
Arrogant and deceitful interpersonal style.
Deficient affective experience.
Impulsive, irresponsible, parasitic lifestyle.
Antisocial manifestations.
Psychopathy- Misconceptions:
Who is classed as a successful psychopath?
Can you score high on psychopathy assessment and still not be a criminal?
Commit crimes but are not caught- have no history of criminal conviction or violence.
Yes- evidence- 1% of the normative population are like this.
Continuation from psychopathy misconceptions:
What is two words people confuse a lot?
What is the difference between them?
What can happen?
Psychopath and psychotic.
Psychopaths- rational not delusional- know right from wrong.
Psychotics- Delusional + hallucinations (no reality).
Co morbid in the same individual- could have been a psychopath but is now delusional.
Continuation from psychopathy misconceptions:
What is not synonymous?
How much offenders with psychopathy would meet the criteria for the diagnosis of ASPD?
Why?
How much individuals with ASPD meet the criteria for psychopathy?
Why?
Psychopathy and ASPD.
90%.
Score high on facet 3 and 4- kind of have ASPD.
High in psychopathy- have an antisocial aspect to you.
25%.
Meet factor 2 but not 1.
ASPD- should have a diagnosis of CD- since young.
Psychopathy subtypes:
What is the first subtype of psychopathy?
How are people with primary psychopathy like?
Primary.
1) Affective deficit is heritable.
2) Low level of anxiety.
3) Engage in instrumental/proactive aggression.
Continuation with psychopathy subtypes:
What is the second subtype of psychopathy?
How are people with secondary psychopathy like?
Secondary.
1) Affective deficit- result of- early environmental risk factors like parental abuse.
2) High level of anxiety + emotionally volatile.
3) Reactive + motivated by hate/revenge.
Continuation with psychopathy subtypes:
What is the last subtype?
What is the difference between a successful and unsuccessful psychopath?
What do successful psychopaths still have?
What do successful psychopaths also have?
What would that be considered?
Successful vs unsuccessful.
No criminal conviction vs criminal conviction.
Symptomatology.
Good neurobiological functioning- good executive functioning- smart.
Protective factor.
Psychopathy as a neurodevelopmental disorder:
What can psychopathy be considered?
What is a core feature of adult psychopathy?
What does this involve?
What else are defining characteristics of psychopathy?
Has the previous been studied in children and adolescences?
Why?
A neurodevelopmental disorder.
Callous unemotional traits.
Lack of guilt, lack of empathy and shallow affect.
Factor 1 + 2- especially interpersonal + affective facets.
Yes.
To see if you can develop this disorder early life- precursor of it in younger people.
Continuation from psychopathy as a neurodevelopmental disorder:
What are the two subtypes of youths with conduct problems?
Is the previous a basis of being a neurodevelopmental disorder?
What is factor 1 referred to when we speak about children specifically?
1) CD + high callous unemotional traits.
2) CD + low callous unemotional traits.
Yes.
Callous unemotional traits.
Continuation from psychopathy as a neurodevelopmental disorder:
Which type is at risk of developing full blown adult syndrome of psychopathy?
What does it predict later on?
For those with CP and LCU, what is aggressive behaviour like?
Those with conduct problems + high callous unemotional traits.
Delinquency, aggressive and antisocial behaviours + reactive and instrumental aggression.
Reactive.