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1 sorders, such as social-anxiety disorder and psychopathy.
2 al psychiatric disorders, such as autism and psychopathy.
3 a characteristic neurobiological feature of psychopathy.
4 e-antisocial behavior and substance abuse in psychopathy.
5 individuals with, or at risk of developing, psychopathy.
6 structurally compromised in individuals with psychopathy.
7 or the affective and interpersonal facets of psychopathy.
8 bute to emotional and behavioral symptoms of psychopathy.
9 motional traits thought to be antecedents of psychopathy.
10 of Wormwood Scrubs prison with developmental psychopathy.
11 tal damage resulted in a syndrome resembling psychopathy.
12 d with aggression and some disorders such as psychopathy.
13 nt of social affiliation in individuals with psychopathy.
14 "dark") personality traits such as egoism or psychopathy.
15 nterpersonal features, namely schizotypy and psychopathy.
16 rocessing in association with schizotypy and psychopathy.
17 g in schizotypy and heightened processing in psychopathy.
18 nism and psychopathy, and between sadism and psychopathy.
19 ower on the combined and primary measures of psychopathy.
20 e empathic processing of others' distress in psychopathy.
21 speed) was predicted by individual levels of psychopathy.
22 turbed behavioral patterns pathognomonic for psychopathy.
23 involvement of 5-HT1BR binding in anger and psychopathy.
24 sorder, antisocial personality disorder, and psychopathy.
25 to characterize further the neural bases of psychopathy.
26 ch seems to be promising in the treatment of psychopathy.
27 xible behavior displayed by individuals with psychopathy.
28 d reactive aggression, which both feature in psychopathy.
29 hin the dorsal frontal lobe in subjects with psychopathy.
30 h reports of aversive processing deficits in psychopathy.
31 rsonality disorder (ASPD) and offenders with psychopathy.
32 29), or low (25 men; PCL-R, </=20) levels of psychopathy.
33 in these children and confer risk for adult psychopathy.
34 hallmark characteristic of individuals with psychopathy.
35 ing risk for empathic deficits seen in adult psychopathy.
36 abnormalities of social behavior observed in psychopathy.
37 l case) where the convict was diagnosed with psychopathy.
38 ers with antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy, 20 were violent offenders with antisocial p
39 vidence of deficient cortical functioning in psychopathy, a neurobiological approach seems to be prom
40 cognition as those seen in individuals with psychopathy, a personality construct characterized by ca
41 , trait psychopathy (p = .008), and level of psychopathy according to the Psychopathy Checklist-Revis
42 yze brain activation changes associated with psychopathy across 28 functional magnetic resonance imag
43 Machiavellianism significantly differed from psychopathy across correlations for nine of 10 traits (S
46 en persistently violent men with and without psychopathy adds to the evidence that psychopathy repres
54 ses of amygdala deficits in individuals with psychopathy and indicate that amygdala abnormalities con
55 sisted of objective ratings of psychosis and psychopathy and neuropsychological tests of intelligence
56 high incidence of psychosis and low level of psychopathy and one by low incidence of psychosis and hi
57 Dark Tetrad (specifically, Machiavellianism-psychopathy and sadism-psychopathy) through an examinati
58 e novel evidence on the neural correlates of psychopathy and suggest that connectivity between cortic
62 typical social affiliation and attachment in psychopathy, and outline several key processes and neura
64 rticipants completed self-report measures of psychopathy, and then played a modified Trust Game in th
65 s--autism-spectrum disorder, schizotypy, and psychopathy--and found that each presents a unique mind-
67 tes that antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy are not synonymous terms for the same disord
68 l (CU) traits, a proposed precursor to adult psychopathy, are characterized by impaired emotion recog
70 allenge the claims that Machiavellianism and psychopathy, as well as sadism and psychopathy, as curre
71 examined 17 violent offenders with ASPD and psychopathy (ASPD+P), 28 violent offenders with ASPD wit
72 D+P), 28 violent offenders with ASPD without psychopathy (ASPD-P), and 21 healthy non-offenders on ta
73 activity may not just be an epiphenomenon of psychopathy but directly related to the psychopathology
74 abnormalities are particularly prominent in psychopathy, but effective pharmacological interventions
75 ls alone cannot explain why individuals with psychopathy can regularly benefit from emotional informa
77 e classified according to scores on the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) as high (27 men; P
83 n Self-Report Psychopathy Scale (LSRPS), the psychopathy construct from the Dirty Dozen, and the Psyc
84 M is needed, these findings suggest that the psychopathy construct may be relevant to chimpanzees.
86 male prison inmates selected on the basis of psychopathy diagnosis (21 psychopathic inmates and 31 no
87 attern (which we also found in subjects with psychopathy) differs from that of patients with adult-on
89 or in general (irrespective of their risk of psychopathy) display reduced neural response to laughter
90 ers with antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy displayed discrete regions of increased acti
91 low incidence of psychosis and high level of psychopathy, each corresponding to distinct neuropsychol
92 ssing have not yet been directly examined in psychopathy, especially in response to the perception of
93 s cues expressed by others, individuals with psychopathy exhibit deficits in the ventromedial prefron
94 subscores for the "factors" and "facets" of psychopathy: Factor 1, interpersonal/affective traits; F
99 social personality disorder with and without psychopathy has implications for the causes of these dis
103 liation, and lack of prosocial behaviours in psychopathy, have yet to be systematically investigated.
104 ity dimensions labeled psychological health, psychopathy, hostility, narcissism, emotional dysregulat
117 ascertaining causality, specifically whether psychopathy is a risk associated with or a result of AAS
121 nal magnetic resonance imaging, we show that psychopathy is associated with reduced functional connec
122 Using diffusion tensor imaging, we show that psychopathy is associated with reduced structural integr
128 al responses to empathy-eliciting stimuli in psychopathy is necessary to inform intervention programs
130 One distinctive feature of individuals with psychopathy is their reduced motivation and capacity to
132 brain imaging data to directly test whether psychopathy may indeed be associated with any structural
133 himpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the Chimpanzee Psychopathy Measure (CPM), and asked 6 raters to complet
134 and borderline personality disorder, but not psychopathy or antisocial personality disorder, was asso
136 self-reported trait anger (p = .0004), trait psychopathy (p = .008), and level of psychopathy accordi
137 personality disorder (ASPD) with or without psychopathy (+/-P) are responsible for most violent crim
138 o effective treatment exists for adults with psychopathy, preliminary intervention studies targeting
139 have largely focused on how individuals with psychopathy process negative emotions, and how this migh
140 completed childhood trauma, alexithymia, and psychopathy questionnaires and three emotion tasks: face
144 hopathy scales from the Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale (LSRPS), the psychopathy construct fro
145 es of psychopathy: the primary and secondary psychopathy scales from the Levenson Self-Report Psychop
147 yses related network connectivity to overall psychopathy scores and to subscores for the "factors" an
148 ygdala volumes and increased total and facet psychopathy scores, with correlations strongest for the
149 ssociated with higher externalizing (but not psychopathy) scores, and with higher levels of aggressio
151 aviour of those with additional diagnoses of psychopathy seems particularly resistant to punishment.
156 rt of a biomechanical cause of the convict's psychopathy significantly reduced the extent to which ps
157 ifically Cognitive-Perceptual dimension) and psychopathy (specifically Lifestyle dimension) are assoc
158 lation drives maladaptive decision making in psychopathy, supporting the notion that reward system dy
160 ideo stimulus and completed four measures of psychopathy: the primary and secondary psychopathy scale
161 lly, Machiavellianism-psychopathy and sadism-psychopathy) through an examination of the differences b
163 re as or more likely than individuals low on psychopathy to report negative affect in response to reg
164 curacy, when controlling for alexithymia and psychopathy traits, and if this varied across modality,
170 hy significantly reduced the extent to which psychopathy was rated as aggravating and significantly r
171 individuals who scored high on a measure of psychopathy were as or more likely than individuals low
175 l for our understanding of disorders such as psychopathy, which is characterized by deficits in incor