Literature DB >> 19793581

Attention moderates the fearlessness of psychopathic offenders.

Joseph P Newman1, John J Curtin, Jeremy D Bertsch, Arielle R Baskin-Sommers.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Psychopathic behavior is generally attributed to a fundamental, amygdala-mediated deficit in fearlessness that undermines social conformity. An alternative view is that psychopathy involves an attention-related deficit that undermines the processing of peripheral information, including fear stimuli.
METHODS: We evaluated these alternative hypotheses by measuring fear-potentiated startle (FPS) in a group of 125 prisoners under experimental conditions that 1) focused attention directly on fear-relevant information or 2) established an alternative attentional focus. Psychopathy was assessed using Hare's Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R).
RESULTS: Psychopathic individuals displayed normal FPS under threat-focused conditions but manifested a significant deficit in FPS under alternative-focus conditions. Moreover, these findings were essentially unchanged when analyses employed the interpersonal/affective factor of the PCL-R instead of PCL-R total scores.
CONCLUSIONS: The results provide unprecedented evidence that higher-order cognitive processes moderate the fear deficits of psychopathic individuals. These findings suggest that psychopaths' diminished reactivity to fear stimuli, and emotion-related cues more generally, reflect idiosyncrasies in attention that limit their processing of peripheral information. Although psychopathic individuals are commonly described as cold-blooded predators who are unmotivated to change, the attentional dysfunction identified in this study supports an alternative interpretation of their chronic disinhibition and insensitive interpersonal style.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 19793581      PMCID: PMC2795048          DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2009.07.035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0006-3223            Impact factor:   13.382


  21 in total

1.  A study of anxiety in the sociopathic personality.

Authors:  D T LYKKEN
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1957-07

2.  Conditioned fear as revealed by magnitude of startle response to an auditory stimulus.

Authors:  J S BROWN; H I KALISH; I E FARBER
Journal:  J Exp Psychol       Date:  1951-05

3.  The impact of motivationally neutral cues on psychopathic individuals: assessing the generality of the response modulation hypothesis.

Authors:  J P Newman; W A Schmitt; W D Voss
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1997-11

4.  Approach and avoidance motivation in psychopathic criminal offenders during passive avoidance.

Authors:  P A Arnett; S S Smith; J P Newman
Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol       Date:  1997-06

5.  Deficient fear conditioning in psychopathy: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

Authors:  Niels Birbaumer; Ralf Veit; Martin Lotze; Michael Erb; Christiane Hermann; Wolfgang Grodd; Herta Flor
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2005-07

6.  Psychopathy and the allocation of attentional capacity in a divided-attention situation.

Authors:  D S Kosson; J P Newman
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1986-08

Review 7.  Reflectivity and learning from aversive events: toward a psychological mechanism for the syndromes of disinhibition.

Authors:  C M Patterson; J P Newman
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  1993-10       Impact factor: 8.934

8.  Baseline startle amplitude and prepulse inhibition in Vietnam veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder.

Authors:  C Grillon; C A Morgan; S M Southwick; M Davis; D S Charney
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  1996-10-16       Impact factor: 3.222

9.  Baseline and fear-potentiated startle in panic disorder patients.

Authors:  C Grillon; R Ameli; A Goddard; S W Woods; M Davis
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  1994-04-01       Impact factor: 13.382

Review 10.  Fear-potentiated startle: a neural and pharmacological analysis.

Authors:  M Davis; W A Falls; S Campeau; M Kim
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  1993-12-20       Impact factor: 3.332

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  73 in total

1.  Emotion disrupts neural activity during selective attention in psychopathy.

Authors:  Naomi Sadeh; Jeffrey M Spielberg; Wendy Heller; John D Herrington; Anna S Engels; Stacie L Warren; Laura D Crocker; Bradley P Sutton; Gregory A Miller
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2011-12-29       Impact factor: 3.436

2.  Borderline personality disorder as a female phenotypic expression of psychopathy?

Authors:  Jenessa Sprague; Shabnam Javdani; Naomi Sadeh; Joseph P Newman; Edelyn Verona
Journal:  Personal Disord       Date:  2011-07-04

3.  Evaluating the generalizability of a fear deficit in psychopathic African American offenders.

Authors:  Arielle R Baskin-Sommers; Joseph P Newman; Nina Sathasivam; John J Curtin
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2011-02

4.  Parenting stress and externalizing behavior symptoms in children: the impact of emotional reactivity.

Authors:  Giulia Buodo; Ughetta Moscardino; Sara Scrimin; Gianmarco Altoè; Daniela Palomba
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2013-12

5.  Altered resting-state functional connectivity in cortical networks in psychopathy.

Authors:  Carissa L Philippi; Maia S Pujara; Julian C Motzkin; Joseph Newman; Kent A Kiehl; Michael Koenigs
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 6.167

6.  Socioemotional processing of morally-laden behavior and their consequences on others in forensic psychopaths.

Authors:  Jean Decety; Chenyi Chen; Carla L Harenski; Kent A Kiehl
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2015-01-30       Impact factor: 5.038

7.  Psychopathy is associated with an exaggerated attention bottleneck: EEG and behavioral evidence from a dual-task paradigm.

Authors:  Scott Tillem; Hannah Weinstein; Arielle Baskin-Sommers
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2021-04-05       Impact factor: 3.282

8.  Disrupted neural processing of emotional faces in psychopathy.

Authors:  Oren Contreras-Rodríguez; Jesus Pujol; Iolanda Batalla; Ben J Harrison; Javier Bosque; Immaculada Ibern-Regàs; Rosa Hernández-Ribas; Carles Soriano-Mas; Joan Deus; Marina López-Solà; Josep Pifarré; José M Menchón; Narcís Cardoner
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2013-02-05       Impact factor: 3.436

9.  Psychopathy, attention, and oddball target detection: New insights from PCL-R facet scores.

Authors:  Nathaniel E Anderson; Vaughn R Steele; J Michael Maurer; Edward M Bernat; Kent A Kiehl
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2015-04-24       Impact factor: 4.016

10.  Psychopathic and externalizing offenders display dissociable dysfunctions when responding to facial affect.

Authors:  Arielle R Baskin-Sommers; Joseph P Newman
Journal:  Personal Disord       Date:  2014-06-16
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