Dimensional assessment of psychopathy and its relationship with physiological responses to empathic images in juvenile offenders

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Abstract

Objective: Many psychophysiological studies investigate whether psychopaths present low levels of electrodermal activity (EDA). However, despite evidence that varying degrees of psychopathy are normally distributed in the population, there is a paucity of EDA studies evaluating dimensionally. Moreover, although lack of empathy is a cornerstone of psychopathy, there has been a lack of studies using pictures of empathic emotional content to assess psychophysiological responses. Method: We studied a population of young male delinquents (n = 30) from a detention center, using the Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R) to determine if higher levels of psychopathy were related to lesser degrees of EDA in response to emotion-eliciting pictures of empathic content. Results: There were significant correlations (p < 0.05) between latency and peak of EDA responses to unpleasant pictures and factor 1 scores, as well as between lability of EDA responses and factor 2 scores. Conclusion: These results extend previous findings indicating direct relationship between EDA and psychopathy, and suggest that separate investigations of the two PCL-R factors have the potential to unravel more complex relationships between EDA and psychopathy. Also, by demonstrating such associations using emotion-provoking stimuli with empathic content, our results provide a link between levels of psychopathy and biological indices of empathic detachment. © 2013 de Barros, Dias, Serafim, Castellana, Achá and Busatto.

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de Barros, D. M., Dias, A. M., Serafim, A. de P., Castellana, G. B., Faria Achá, M. F., & Busatto, G. F. (2013). Dimensional assessment of psychopathy and its relationship with physiological responses to empathic images in juvenile offenders. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 4(NOV). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00147

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