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A systematic review of the influence of parenting on the development of antisocial behaviour / Influence of parenting on development of antisocial behaviourJacobs, Philencia Daniela January 2013 (has links)
The role that parenting plays in the development of antisocial behaviour has been, and is still widely researched. International studies on this topic are vast. In South Africa, however, very little has been researched within this area. This study aimed to systematically review literature on the role of parenting in the development of antisocial behaviour. International literature published between 2000 and 2013 was reviewed in order to gain a better idea of the current state of knowledge on this topic. All of the articles included in the review examined some aspect of parenting behaviour, parenting practices and/or parenting styles related to the development of antisocial behaviour, conduct disorder, and/or oppositional defiant disorder. The articles were systematically assessed, and eight themes emerged which include: effective parenting behaviours; the moderating effects of callous unemotional traits on parenting; parental warmth; parental discipline; parental knowledge and monitoring; parental psychopathology; parenting styles; and parenting during infancy.
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The validity of lie detection with criminal psychopathsPatrick, Christopher John January 1987 (has links)
The idea that psychopaths may be able to "beat" a standard polygraph ("lie detector") test remains a controversial issue. The one published study to date that has addressed this question directly (Raskin & Hare, 1978) has been challenged on the grounds that: 1) the polygraph testing situation lacked a 'realistic threat component, and 2) the examiner's decisions were not based on blind chart analyses (Lykken, 1978). The present study re-assessed the accuracy of the polygraph with psychopaths using a revised procedure, in response to Lykken's criticisms. Subjects were 24
psychopathic and 24 nonpsychopathic male prison inmates (aged 18-54) selected on the basis of psychopathy checklist scores (Hare, 1980) and DSM-III ratings within each diagnostic sample, equal groups of "guilty" and "innocent" subjects were tested regarding their involvement in a mock theft by experienced professional polygraphers using control question procedures. Methodological innovations included: a) a "group contingency threat" manipulation which produced a realistic motivational; atmosphere for the polygraph test, b) simultaneous recordings of physiological activity on field and laboratory polygraph instruments, and c) blind numerical analyses of the field polygraph charts. Consistent with Raskin and Hare's results, the guilty psychopaths in the present study were detected just as easily as the guilty nonpsychopaths, and the majority of guilty subjects (87%, excluding inconclusives ) were correctly identified, even when the decisions were based on blind chart analyses. However in contrast to Raskin and Hare's 91% accuracy figure for innocent subjects, the overall hit rate for innocent subjects in the present study was only 56%. Quantitative analyses of the laboratory polygraph recordings revealed few meaningful differences between psychopaths and nonpsychopaths, and the results for guilty and innocent subjects closely matched those obtained with the field polygraph. The findings were discussed in terms of their implications for the field validity of the control question test and the responsivity of psychopaths to threat. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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Psychopathy, alexithymia and affect in female offendersLouth, Shirley May 11 1900 (has links)
Psychopathy and alexithymia are disorders with many
conceptual similarities. For example, Factor 1
of the
Psychopathy Checklist - Revised (PCL-R; Hare, 1991) contains
items like shallow affect and lack of empathy, which seem to map
on to the construct of alexithymia. Additionally, both
psychopaths and alexithymics display striking differences from
others in their use of language, especially affective language.
The two areas of interest in the present study were (a)
occurrence and co—occurrence of psychopathy and alexithymia in a
sample of female inmates, and (b) the relationship between
affective language and these two disorders.
Psychopathy and alexithymia were assessed in 37 women
offenders incarcerated in a
Burnaby Correctional Centre, using
the PCL-R
and the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (
TAS; Taylor, Ryan &
Bagby, 1985). Each subject was presented with a
short written
scenario designed to elicit an emotional response, and asked to
describe the feelings of the characters in the story. Their taped
responses were analyzed for measures of affect.
Base rates of both disorders were comparable to those in
similar samples, (
30% of the inmates were diagnosed as
psychopathic; 33% as alexithymic) but the coxnorbidity rate was
only 8%. There was a
significant correlation between alexithymia
scores and PCL—R
Factor 2
scores —
the factor assessing
antisocial behaviour. Multiple regression analysis revealed that the TAS and PCL-R were both predictive of violence. This
relationship between the PCL-R and violence is well
substantiated; that the TAS also predicts violence is a newer
finding.
Alexithymics spoke more slowly, used fewer total words
overall and fewer affective words, and displayed less emotion in
their voices than did nonalexithymics. Psychopaths could not be
identified by any vocal measures except a slight tendency to
speak faster than nonpsychopaths. Although both disorders are
characterized’ by affective impoverishment, the verbal expressions
of affect were very different in psychopaths and alexithymics.
The psychopaths were adept at convincing raters of an emotional
investment they did not feel; alexithymics could not disguise
their lack of appropriate emotional response. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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A neuroimaging investigation of affective, cognitive, and language functions in psychopathyKiehl, Kent Anthony 05 1900 (has links)
Psychopathy is a complex personality disorder denned by a constellation of affective
and behavioral characteristics. There is accumulating behavioral evidence suggesting that the
condition is associated with impairments in affective, cognitive, and language functions.
However, relatively little is known regarding the neural systems underlying these
abnormalities. The present thesis is comprised of five experiments designed to elucidate and
characterize the abnormal functional architecture underlying these abnormalities in
psychopathic criminals. In Experiments 1 and 2, functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) was used to elucidate the neural systems underling abnormal semantic and affective
processes in these individuals. In Experiments 3, 4 and 5, event-related potentials (ERPs)
were used to characterize the temporal features of cognitive and language functions in
psychopaths.
The results from Experiment 1 revealed that compared to control participants,
psychopaths performed more poorly and failed to showed the appropriate neural
differentiation between abstract and concrete stimuli during a lexical decision task. These
deficits were located in the right anterior superior temporal gyrus.
The results from Experiment 2 indicated that psychopaths, relative to control
participants, showed less activation for processing affective stimuli than for neutral stimuli in
several neural regions, including the right amygdala/hippocampal formation, left
parahippocampal gyrus, ventral striatum, and in the anterior and posterior cingulate.
Psychopaths did show greater activation for processing affective than for neutral stimuli in
regions located outside the limbic system, including bilateral inferior frontal gyrus. These
latter data suggesting that psychopaths used different neural systems than did controls for
performing the task.
The results from Experiments 3 and 4 indicated that psychopathy is associated with
abnormalities in the P3 ERP component elicited by target stimuli during visual and auditory
oddball tasks. In addition, the psychopaths' ERPs to visual and auditory target stimuli were
characterized by large fronto-central negativities in the 350-600 millisecond time window.
These fronto-central ERP negativities are similar to those observed for patients with temporal
lobe damage.
In Experiment 5, using a standard sentence processing paradigm, no group
differences were observed between psychopaths and nonpsychopaths in the amplitude of the
N400 potential elicited by terminal words of sentences that were either congruent or
incongruent with the previous sentence context. These results indicate that the abnormal
fronto-central ERP negativities observed in previous studies of language function in
psychopaths are not related to processes involved in the generation of the N400.
Taken together, these data suggest that one of the cardinal abnormalities in
psychopathy is abnormal semantic processing of conceptually abstract information and
affective information and that these abnormalities are related to the function of neural circuits
in the anterior temporal lobes and lateral frontal cortex. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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Personality disorders as gender rolesOlivier, Glenda J. 01 January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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A Prototypical Analysis of Antisocial Personality Disorder: Important Considerations for the DSM-IVDuncan, Julianne Christine 05 1900 (has links)
Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) represents a controversial diagnoses which has gone through many revisions over the past 25 years and is scheduled to be revised again for the DSM IV. A comprehensive survey was composed of APD criteria from the DSM II, DSM III, DSM III-R, PCL-R, Psychopathic Personality Disorder, and Dyssocial Personality Disorder. The survey was completed by 321 forensic psychiatrists based on which criteria they believed to be the most prototypical of antisocial personality. The results identified four factors: irresponsibility, unstable self image, and unstable relationships; manipulation and lack of guilt; aggressive behavior; and nonviolent juvenile delinquency. A diagnostic set composed of the most prototypical criteria was proposed for the DSM IV diagnosis of APD.
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Effects of Defensiveness on the Reporting of Personality Disorder SymptomsFiduccia, Chelsea E. 12 1900 (has links)
Personality disorders are not granted the same clinical attention accorded Axis I disorders despite their instrumental role in treatment and outcome. Even when standardized assessments are used, their clinical utility may be limited by an overly favorable self-presentation. The current study focused on defensiveness, the intentional denial of symptomatology, by examining individuals’ ability to minimize their presentation on personality disorder diagnostic measures. Using a within-subjects simulation design, dually diagnosed inpatients were assessed under both honest and defensive conditions. The study used self-report (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV – Axis II – Personality Questionnaire, SCID-II-PQ) and interview-based (Structured Interview for DSM-IV Personality, SIDP-IV) diagnostic measures and a self-report measure of favorable self-presentation (Paulhus Deception Scales, PDS). The inpatients were quite capable of hiding maladaptive personality traits on diagnostic measures, with similarly large effect sizes on both the SCID-II-PQ and SIDP-IV. In addition to the PDS, two new detection strategies for identifying defensiveness showed promise.
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Attachment Insecurity, Emotion Regulation Difficulties, and Mindfulness Deficits in Personality PathologyLewis, Jonathan James 08 1900 (has links)
A growing body of research has documented associations between personality disorders (PDs) and attachment disturbance, and yet, attachment disturbance does not necessarily guarantee the development of PD pathology. Thus, understanding the mechanisms mediating the relationship between attachment disturbance and PD pathology remains an open area of research. One area with sound theoretical and empirical evidence has shown that attachment disturbances are associated with emotion regulation difficulties, as well as maladaptive interpersonal patterns of behavior. However, the research conducted thus far has predominately focused on borderline personality disorder, at the exclusion of other PD domains, and also has not broadened the scope of research to include other relevant psychological processes that may clarify how personality pathology and attachment disturbance are interrelated. Using a large independent sample of college (n = 946) and community-based individuals (n = 271), the current study aimed to (1) examine how the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5) PD trait domains would be differentially associated with maladaptive attachment processes and emotion regulation problems, and (2) explore whether deficits in mindfulness and emotion regulation mediated the relationship between disturbed attachment and PD trait domains. Findings suggested that the PID-5 PD trait domains have general and specific relations to attachment insecurity, impairments in emotion regulation, and decreased mindfulness. Overall, the current study suggests that improving emotion regulation skills and increasing dispositional mindfulness may limit the expression of pathological personality traits. Implications of these findings and directions for future research are discussed.
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The heart rate response to alcohol intoxication and its relationship with alcohol consumption, delinquency, and intoxicated aggressive and disinhibited behaviors /Assaad, Jean-Marc January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Assessing Personality Disorders Using the MMPI-2-RFSmith, Ashley M. 21 July 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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