Monday, 6 April 2015

Not all psychopaths fit the stereotype: Many hide unmanageable emotion, can be helped with right therapy



by Jeffrey R. Wakefield



Tim Stickle, professor of psychological science. Credit: Sally McCay

Movie villains from Norman Bates to Hannibal Lecter have popularized the notion of the psychopath as cold, cruel, lacking in empathy and beyond the reach of treatment.



A new study in the Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology suggests that this monolithic view, shared by some treatment professionals, is not only wrong but prevents many diagnosed with , or precursors of it, from receiving therapies that could help them live happier, more productive lives.


The study focused on 150 male and female youth housed in juvenile detention centers, aged 11 to 17, who were classified as callous and unemotional, or CU, exhibiting severe anti-social behaviors that put them at risk of developing psychopathic traits as adults.


While some in the research sample did fit the classic definition of psychopathy, a significant subgroup did not, said Tim Stickle, professor of Psychology at the University of Vermont, who co-authored the paper with Andrew Gill, a graduate student at the university.


"They appear callous and unemotional to others but are actually very distressed, have high levels of anxiety, higher levels of depression, higher levels of emotion," he said. "We think of these harmful, antisocial, aggressive kids as being immune to fear, immune to negative feelings, but in fact we're showing a whole group of them are not only not immune, but are very susceptible."


The hopeful implication, said Stickle, is that this set of psychological issues is treatable with approaches such as and dialectical behavior therapy that teach strategies for managing emotions.


Conventional treatments for aggression and psychopathy emphasize rewards and punishments to change unwanted behaviors.


"There is an opportunity to do things differently and more effectively," Stickle said.


Savings of $3 million over lifetime


Effectively treating youth at risk of developing psychopathy as adults has value on a societal as well as an individual level.


"Untreated callous unemotional traits put these youth at risk for becoming lifelong criminals," Stickle said.


Preventing one high risk youth from developing lifelong antisocial behavior will save approximately $3 million across the youth's lifetime, according to a study conducted in 2007.


Other recent studies have confirmed that this emotionally distressed subgroup also exists among adults with .


Key advance: a comprehensive diagnostic test that reveals differences


The study's ability to identify subgroups within the CU research sample was made possible by the psychological testing instruments the researchers used, which gathered information from subjects on a wide variety of personality and emotional traits.


Psychopathy is usually identified with a far narrower checklist of traits and behaviors.


"It's not just one characteristic that allows clear identification of who falls in which group; it takes a wide range of traits," Stickle said.


The multidimensional testing tools the study employed should be widely adopted in the future, said Stickle, to ensure that those in the secondary psychopathy subgroup receive the appropriate therapy.


"Using a wide range of measures of emotional experience and expression is very important to clearly identify who these individuals are so they can be helped," he said.


Girls more vulnerable


The study is first to find that CU girls are especially likely to fall within the group that suffers from significant emotional distress and unregulated negative feeling.


"These traits are particularly prevalent in adolescent females in the juvenile justice system," Stickle said.


The study also breaks ground in showing that callous and unemotional youth are at risk of developing clinically significant levels of depression.



Medical Xpress on facebook


Related Stories


Psychopathic traits in teenagers not cast in stone


date Sep 19, 2013

Most youths are concerned about other people's feelings, they feel bad or guilty when they have done something wrong and they adhere to social rules. A small group of youths, however, does not. These youths express psychopathic ...



Study uncovers different routes to problem behaviour


date Sep 09, 2014

There are two distinct pathways involved in the development of callous unemotional (CU) traits in young teenagers – one primarily linked to environmental risk factors, the other to genetic ones – according ...



Babies' interest in human faces linked to callous and unemotional traits


date Oct 16, 2014

Scientists at King's College London, the University of Manchester, and the University of Liverpool have found that an infant's preference for a person's face, rather than an object, is associated with lower ...



Researcher publishes a study of psychopathy and criminal behavior


date Jun 18, 2013

University of Huddersfield researcher, Dr Daniel Boduszek, has co authored a an article in the Journal of Ciminal Psychology that analyses the relationship between psycopathy and criminal behaviour.



Psychopathy: A misunderstood personality disorder


date Dec 07, 2011

Psychopathic personalities are some of the most memorable characters portrayed in popular media today. These characters, like Patrick Bateman from American Psycho, Frank Abagnale Jr. from Catch Me If You Can and Alex from ...





Recommended for you



Research debunks belief about narcissism


date 3 hours ago

Excessive use of first-person singular pronouns, or 'I-talk,' is not clearly linked to a sense of self-importance and an overabundance of self-focus.




How our emotions transform mundane events into strong memories


date 3 hours ago

Human beings are information seekers. We are constantly taking in details – big and small – from our environment. But the majority of the stuff we encounter in a given day we rarely need to remember. ...




Exercise might boost mental function in people with schizophrenia


date Apr 03, 2015

(HealthDay)—Aerobic exercise might boost memory and thinking skills in people with schizophrenia, a small study finds.




Fertility patients' history is best predictor of risk for major depression


date Apr 03, 2015

A potent risk factor for developing major depressive disorder (MDD) during fertility treatment is something health providers are likely not even looking for, according to new research from San Francisco State ...



Gender difference in moral judgments rooted in emotion, not reasoning, study finds


date Apr 03, 2015

If a time machine was available, would it be right to kill Adolf Hitler when he was still a young Austrian artist to prevent World War II and save millions of lives? Should a police officer torture an alleged bomber to find ...




Bullied girls, but not boys, benefit from mom's support


date Apr 03, 2015

Children who are bullied become tolerant of aggressive and antisocial behavior, such as cheating, lying or being cruel to others.




User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here to reset your password.

Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.








by Jeffrey R. Wakefield



Tim Stickle, professor of psychological science. Credit: Sally McCay


Movie villains from Norman Bates to Hannibal Lecter have popularized the notion of the psychopath as cold, cruel, lacking in empathy and beyond the reach of treatment.



A new study in the Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology suggests that this monolithic view, shared by some treatment professionals, is not only wrong but prevents many diagnosed with , or precursors of it, from receiving therapies that could help them live happier, more productive lives.


The study focused on 150 male and female youth housed in juvenile detention centers, aged 11 to 17, who were classified as callous and unemotional, or CU, exhibiting severe anti-social behaviors that put them at risk of developing psychopathic traits as adults.


While some in the research sample did fit the classic definition of psychopathy, a significant subgroup did not, said Tim Stickle, professor of Psychology at the University of Vermont, who co-authored the paper with Andrew Gill, a graduate student at the university.


"They appear callous and unemotional to others but are actually very distressed, have high levels of anxiety, higher levels of depression, higher levels of emotion," he said. "We think of these harmful, antisocial, aggressive kids as being immune to fear, immune to negative feelings, but in fact we're showing a whole group of them are not only not immune, but are very susceptible."


The hopeful implication, said Stickle, is that this set of psychological issues is treatable with approaches such as and dialectical behavior therapy that teach strategies for managing emotions.


Conventional treatments for aggression and psychopathy emphasize rewards and punishments to change unwanted behaviors.


"There is an opportunity to do things differently and more effectively," Stickle said.


Savings of $3 million over lifetime


Effectively treating youth at risk of developing psychopathy as adults has value on a societal as well as an individual level.


"Untreated callous unemotional traits put these youth at risk for becoming lifelong criminals," Stickle said.


Preventing one high risk youth from developing lifelong antisocial behavior will save approximately $3 million across the youth's lifetime, according to a study conducted in 2007.


Other recent studies have confirmed that this emotionally distressed subgroup also exists among adults with .


Key advance: a comprehensive diagnostic test that reveals differences


The study's ability to identify subgroups within the CU research sample was made possible by the psychological testing instruments the researchers used, which gathered information from subjects on a wide variety of personality and emotional traits.


Psychopathy is usually identified with a far narrower checklist of traits and behaviors.


"It's not just one characteristic that allows clear identification of who falls in which group; it takes a wide range of traits," Stickle said.


The multidimensional testing tools the study employed should be widely adopted in the future, said Stickle, to ensure that those in the secondary psychopathy subgroup receive the appropriate therapy.


"Using a wide range of measures of emotional experience and expression is very important to clearly identify who these individuals are so they can be helped," he said.


Girls more vulnerable


The study is first to find that CU girls are especially likely to fall within the group that suffers from significant emotional distress and unregulated negative feeling.


"These traits are particularly prevalent in adolescent females in the juvenile justice system," Stickle said.


The study also breaks ground in showing that callous and unemotional youth are at risk of developing clinically significant levels of depression.



Medical Xpress on facebook


Related Stories


Psychopathic traits in teenagers not cast in stone


date Sep 19, 2013

Most youths are concerned about other people's feelings, they feel bad or guilty when they have done something wrong and they adhere to social rules. A small group of youths, however, does not. These youths express psychopathic ...



Study uncovers different routes to problem behaviour


date Sep 09, 2014

There are two distinct pathways involved in the development of callous unemotional (CU) traits in young teenagers – one primarily linked to environmental risk factors, the other to genetic ones – according ...



Babies' interest in human faces linked to callous and unemotional traits


date Oct 16, 2014

Scientists at King's College London, the University of Manchester, and the University of Liverpool have found that an infant's preference for a person's face, rather than an object, is associated with lower ...



Researcher publishes a study of psychopathy and criminal behavior


date Jun 18, 2013

University of Huddersfield researcher, Dr Daniel Boduszek, has co authored a an article in the Journal of Ciminal Psychology that analyses the relationship between psycopathy and criminal behaviour.



Psychopathy: A misunderstood personality disorder


date Dec 07, 2011

Psychopathic personalities are some of the most memorable characters portrayed in popular media today. These characters, like Patrick Bateman from American Psycho, Frank Abagnale Jr. from Catch Me If You Can and Alex from ...





Recommended for you



Research debunks belief about narcissism


date 3 hours ago

Excessive use of first-person singular pronouns, or 'I-talk,' is not clearly linked to a sense of self-importance and an overabundance of self-focus.




How our emotions transform mundane events into strong memories


date 3 hours ago

Human beings are information seekers. We are constantly taking in details – big and small – from our environment. But the majority of the stuff we encounter in a given day we rarely need to remember. ...




Exercise might boost mental function in people with schizophrenia


date Apr 03, 2015

(HealthDay)—Aerobic exercise might boost memory and thinking skills in people with schizophrenia, a small study finds.




Fertility patients' history is best predictor of risk for major depression


date Apr 03, 2015

A potent risk factor for developing major depressive disorder (MDD) during fertility treatment is something health providers are likely not even looking for, according to new research from San Francisco State ...



Gender difference in moral judgments rooted in emotion, not reasoning, study finds


date Apr 03, 2015

If a time machine was available, would it be right to kill Adolf Hitler when he was still a young Austrian artist to prevent World War II and save millions of lives? Should a police officer torture an alleged bomber to find ...




Bullied girls, but not boys, benefit from mom's support


date Apr 03, 2015

Children who are bullied become tolerant of aggressive and antisocial behavior, such as cheating, lying or being cruel to others.




User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here

to reset your password.


Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.











Categories:

0 comments:

Post a Comment