Examining the relationships between the triarchic psychopathy constructs and behavioral deviance in a community sample

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Abstract

Few studies have examined the extent to which psychopathic traits relate to the commission of mild to moderate acts of deviance, such as vandalism and minor traffic violations. Given that psychopathy is now studied in community populations, the relationship between psychopathic traits and less severe deviant behaviors, which are more normative among noninstitutionalized samples, warrants investigation. The current study examined the relationships between the triarchic model of psychopathy (Patrick, Fowles & Krueger, 2009) and seven forms of deviant behavior (drug use, alcohol use, theft, vandalism, school misconduct, assault, and general deviance) in a nationally representative sample. Triarchic disinhibition positively predicted each form of normative deviance. Boldness positively predicted drug and alcohol use as well as general deviance, while meanness negatively predicted school misconduct. Boldness and disinhibition also positively predicted overall lifetime engagement in deviant behavior. Implications are discussed, including support of the role of boldness within the psychopathy construct.

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Coffey, C. A., Cox, J., & Kopkin, M. R. (2018). Examining the relationships between the triarchic psychopathy constructs and behavioral deviance in a community sample. Journal of Personality Disorders, 32(1), 57–69. https://doi.org/10.1521/pedi_2017_31_288

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