UGA Psyc 5100 Test 3

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Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)

Essential feature is a) the presence of 2 or more distinct personality states or an experience of possession b) recurrent episodes of amnesia

Competency evaluations must be completed how many days post inprisonment

15-30 days

Prevalence Rate of Psychopathy for female offenders in a jail setting

15.5%

What percent of incarcerated females are psychopaths

15.5%

M'Naghen

1843 Was having persecutors delusions -rules not guilty because of insanity -inspired righty wrong test

About ______% of the US adult population has a mental illness and about ______ of that group has a "serious mental illness"

18; 1/5

Juvenile crime peaked in

1994

Symptoms of PTSD usually begin within ________ months of trauma

3

The prevalence of mental disorders is more than _____x higher in the criminal justice population than in the general population

3

What percent of criminal populations are mentally disordered

80-90%

What percentage of criminal populations are mentally disordered

80-90%

Maturation Retardation Hypothesis

Slow brain wave times equals bad choices Meaning underdeveloped

Factor 2 on PCL-R

Social deviant lifestyle

What is the primary argument used by defendants regarding PTSD

That the defendant was in a PTSD dissociated state when they committed the act

Twinkie Defense

The 1978 defense of Dan White against two charges of murder. His defense argued that his mental state was badly impaired by a deep depression exacerbated by his heavy intake of junk food. Sugar lowered his impulse control??

M'Naghten Rule

an insanity standard based on the conclusion that if a defendant has a defect of reason, or a disease of the mind, so as no to know the nature and quality of their actions, then they cannot be held criminally responsible

Type 3 Batterers

generally violent toward both family and persons outside the family

Primary psychopath

"True" psychopath; has certain identifiable psychological, emotional, cognitive, and biological differences that distinguish them from general and criminal populations

Thomas Szasz

(1960-1970) Against medicating mental illness to control behavior

Offending patterns of criminal psychopaths

-believed responsible for a disproportionate amount of crime in society -most violent and persistent offenders -more sadistic -more thrill seeking -not prone to reactive aggression -frequently engage in violence as a form of revenge or retribution

Andrea Yates

-drowned her five children in 2000 -experiences postpartum depression and psychosis

Psychopaths and Mental Disorders

-most psychopaths do NOT exhibit severe or disabling mental disorders -most lack symptoms of excessive worry and anxiety, psychotic thinking, delusions, severe depressions, or hallucinations

What makes someone who is mentally disorder more likely to be violent

-multiple offenses and a history of violence during childhood -psychotic symptoms

Unusual defenses and conditions

-posttraumatic stress disorder -dissociation -dissociative amnesia

Psychological testing differences of psychopaths

-psychopaths ~usually~ score higher on intelligence tests than the general population

Violent risk assessment guide

-scores on the psychopathy scale -history of alcohol abuse -history of trauma -history of violence (Psychopathy and previous violence are best predictors)

Behavioral characteristics of psychopaths

-superficial charm -intelligence -verbally skillful -socially skillful

People with schizophrenia are considered high risk when

-they are also high on the PCL-R -their disorder is Comorbid with substance abuse

When do mental illnesses make it appropriate to assign less responsibility for a crime?

-when they create less impulse control -when they cause the perpetrator to have less grasp on reality

What percentage of the general populations qualify for an APD

0.2-3.3%

The insanity defense is used in ______% of all US felony criminal cases

1

Which factor (1 or 2) is a more powerful indicator of psychopathy?

1

About ____in 15 criminal defendants are evaluated each year for competency to stand trial

1 (about 80% are found competent)

____ murders involve a family member killing another family member

1 in 5

About what percent of the population are psychopaths?

1%

Robert Hare estimates that the prevalence of psychopaths in the general population is about...

1%

Insanity defense isn't accepted in which 4 states

1) Idaho 2) Kansas 3) Montana 4) Utah

Insanity tests usually center around 3 broad models

1) M'Naghen Rule 2) Brawner Rule 3) Durham Rule

4 classes of mental disorder most related to crime

1) Schizophrenia 2) Bipolar Disorder 3) Major Depression 4) Antisocial personality disorder

The Insanity Defense Reform Act changed the Brawner rule in 3 principle ways:

1) abolished the irresistible impulse test (volitional prong) 2) modified the "cognitive" requirement by replacing the phrase "lacks substantial capacity...to appreciate" with "unable to appreciate" 3) mental disease or defect must be severe, to emphasize that certain behavioral disorders do not qualify as a defense

Insanity standard are fundamentally based on 2 criteria:

1) irrationality 2) compulsion

The human nervous system can be divided into what 2 major parts?

1) the central nervous system 2) the peripheral nervous system

John Monahan (1992) stresses 2 things about research showing a connection between mental disorders and violence

1) the relationship refers only to people currently experiencing a serious mental disorder 2) it is still a fact that a great majority (over 90%) of the currently mentally disordered are nonviolent

3 approaches to risk assessment

1) unstructured clinical 2) structured professional judgement 3) actuarial approach

What percentage of the general population in America suffers from PTSD

1-7%

3 legal criterion for committing someone to a facility

1. A preponderance if evidence 2. Clear and convincing proof 3. Beyond a reasonable doubt

To be diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder you must also have 3 of the following behaviors

1. Failure to conform to social norms or the criminal law 2. Irritability and unusual aggressiveness (fights or assault) 3. Consistent irresponsibility as reflected in a poor work history or finances 4. Impulsivity or a failure to plan 5. Deceitfulness 6. Reckless disregard for the safety of others or self 7. Lack of remorse or guilt for wrongdoing

Four factor model of psychopathy

1. Interpersonal 2. Lifestyle 3. affective 4. Antisocial tendencies

Robert Hare estimates that the prevalence of psychopaths in adult prison populations is about...

15-25%

What percent of prisoners are psychopaths?

15-25%

When schizophrenic people do become violent, how many of them are found to be excessively violent

1/3

What % of variance in aggression does media influence account for

10-15

What percentage of criminal populations have major psychiatric diagnoses

10-15%

What percentage of male inmates meet the criteria for psychopathy

11 to 25%

What percent of men with schizophrenia commit violent offenses?

11.3%

What percentage of men and women with schizophrenia committed violent crimes

11.3% of men; 2.3% of women

Bipolar people are ______x more likely to commit suicide than the general pop

15

What percent of women with schizophrenia commit violent offenses?

2.3%

what percent of aggravated assaults include family members?

20%

Only about ______% of juveniles with Conduct Disorder show psychopathic tendencies

25

What percent of victims are related to the offender?

25%

Serial Murder

3 or more separate events in separate locations

A score of __ concludes a psychopath

30

Primary psychopaths are people who get a score of ______ on the PCL-R

30 or above

what percent of murders involve a spouse killing a spouse

35%

Violent crimes account for what percentage of juvenile arrests

4%

Criminal homicies account for what percent of all violent crimes

5%

What percentage of people in the us qualify for some DSM diagnosis at some point in their life?

50% ; 1/2

Psychosis is doing to increase the odds of violence by as much as

50-70%

Psychosis was found to increase the odds of violence by what percent

50-70%

What percent of offenders meet criteria for ASPD?

50-80%

What percentage of male inmates qualify for APD

50-80%

What percent of victims are from someone they knew?

56%

risk assessments allow what percentage of false positive predictions of danger?

60-70%

What percent of arrested offenders for homicide were under 18?

7.5%

Women have a what percent greater chance of being killed when they leave an IPV situation

75%

What percent of murder victims are male?

78%

People with psychotic disorders are _____x more likely to be found Incompetent to stand trial

8

What percentage of students report they have been victimized at school

9% (2% violent and 7% property)

Estimated that ______ million adults experience serious mental illness

9.3

There are about _______ cases of students murdered on campus per year

9.3 (per school it occurs about once every 12,800 years)

What percent of murderers are male?

90%

What percentage of the currently mentally disordered are not violent

90%

PCL:YV

A 20 item rating scale adapted from the adult PCL-R to measure juvenile psychopathy for research purposes

semantic aphasia

A characteristic found in psychopaths whereby the words they speak are devoid of emotional sincerity

Intellectual Disability

A cognitive deficiency that can't be cured

Contemporary research favors the view that psychopathic behavior results from....

A complex interaction between neuropsychological and learning or socialization factors

Mental illness

A disorder of the mind that is judged by experts to interfere substantially with a persons ability cope with life on a daily basis and may impair decision making ability

antisocial personality disorder (APD)

A history of continuous behavior in which the rights of others are violated -must be 18 or over -must have evidence of CD symptoms before age 15

Non-negligent Manslaughter

A homicide committed in the heat of passion or during a sudden quarrel; although intent may be present, malice is not; also called voluntary manslaughter.

Durham Rule (1954)

A legal test for insanity by which an accused person is not responsible if the criminal behavior is judged attributable to mental disease or defect.

orienting response (OR)

A nonspecific, cortical and sensory response to strange and unexpected changes in the environment

Dissociative Identity Disorder

A rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct and alternating personalities. Also called multiple personality disorder.

Caveat Paragraph

A section of the ALI/Brawner rule that excludes abnormality manifested only by repeated criminal or antisocial conduct. It was specifically designed to disallow the insanity defense for psychopaths or persons diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder.

What is the race demographic of murderers

African american males (54%)

Structured Professional Judgement

An approach to risk assessment that relies on both the assessor's clinical judgment and measures that offer guidance in assessing dangerousness and suggesting steps to prevent violence.

The affluenza defense

Argues that rich children are not fully responsible for crimes because their parents never taught them responsibility

The most common hallucinations associated with schizophrenia are...

Auditory

Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R)

Based largely on Cleckleys conception of psychopathy -assesses the affective, interpersonal, behavioral, and social deviance facets of psychopathy from various sources -20 item checklist -each item scored on a scale of 0-2 (0=consistently absent, 1=inconsistent, 2= consistently present) **a score of 30 and above usually qualifies a person as a primary psychopath (scores b/w 21 & 29 = middle subjects)

Why is the autonomic segment of the peripheral nervous system relevant to paychopathy

Because it activated emotional behavior and responsivity to stress and tension; psychopaths show lower autonomic arousal levels

The MacArthur Research Network

Best known research on the potential violence of the mentally disordered

Amygdala Dysfunction is associated with

Callous-unemotional traits

Bipolar Disorder

Characterized by episodes of behavior that are alternately characterized by such features as euphoria, hyper energy, and distractibility (mania) and diminished interest or pleasure in all activities and depressed mood (depression)

Conduct disorder diagnosis is reserved for ____

Children and adolescents

Secondary psychopaths

Commit antisocial or violent acts bc of severe emotional problems or inner conflicts, demonstrate more emotional instability and impulsivity than primary psychopaths; appear to be more aggressive and violent **more rooted in parental abuse and rejection

Amnesia

Complete or partial memory loss of an event,series of events or some segment of life's experiences, either due to physical trauma, neurophysiological disturbance, or psychological factors

Psychopathy exists on a

Continuuum

The three-factor position of psychopathy

Cooke and Michie Factor 1: arrogant/deceptive interpersonal style Factor 2: impulsive and irresponsible behavioral style Factor 3: deficient affective or emotional experience

Intimate Partner Violence

Crimes committed against persons by their current or former spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends

Lorena Bobbitt

Cut off her Rapist husbands penis Her defense said she was experiencing major depression and PTSD

James Holmes (2012)

Dark knight shooting Killed 12 people Schizophrenic

Terri Moffitt

Developmental pathways of juvenile offenders Life course persistent vs adolescent limited

Dyssocial Psychopath

Display aggressive, antisocial behavior they have LEARNED from their subculture (like their gangs, terrorist groups, or families)

Catharsis affects on aggression

Doesn't reduce aggression Increases the likelihood of future aggression

Tarasoff case

Duty to warn vs duty to protect

Schizophrenia usually begins_____

Early in life

The four factor model of psychopathy

Factor 1: arrogant/deceptive interpersonal style Factor 2: impulsive and irresponsible behavioral style Factor 3: deficient affective or emotional experience Factor 4: antisocial behavior

Two-Factor Position of Psychopathy

Factor 1: reflects the interpersonal and emotional components of psychopathy Factor 2: reflects the socially deviant or antisocial lifestyle of psychopathy

True/False: gun violence is increasing in schools

False

Delusions

False beliefs about the world

What does the OJJDP recommend for rehabilitating juvenile offenders

Focusing on the family

Dena Schlosser

Found NGRI after killing her 1 month old daughter and sentenced to psychiatric hospital and treated for only 4 years

Central nervous system differences in psychopaths

Hare hypothesizes that criminal psychopaths manifest an abnormal or unusual balance between the left and right hemisphere of their brain, both in language processing and in emotional/arousal states (left=language;right=emotional)

Raine et al (1990)

Hemispheric specialization in psychopaths -verbal dichotic listening task -significant group ear interaction with right ear better than left ear in non psychopaths and NO assymmetry in psychopaths -indicates psychopaths are less lateralized for verbal processing

What event inspired the insanity reform act of 1984

Hinckley assassination of Kennedy

4 contests of IPV

IPV with coercive control Reactive Violence IPV without coercive control Pathological violence

Herrey Cleckley

Identified 16 characteristics that he felt described the typical psychopath

Anterograde amnesia

Inability to form new memories after an event

Lifestyle (F2 of four factor model)

Irresponsibility; sensation seeking; lack of realistic goals, poor planning, impulsive

Eron and Huesmann (2003)

Longitudinal study of media influence on violence Found young boys who identify with characters are most at risk to influence Found that kids with poor interpersonal relationships with peers are at risk

Anderson and Bushman (2001)

Looked at long term and short term effects of exposure to media violence -showed that childhood exposure could contribute to hostile attribution bias

Interpersonal (F1 of four factor model)

Lying, conning, manipulating; superficial charm, grandiose self-worth

John Hinckley

Man who shot president Ronald Reagan and was found not guilty by reason of insanity

______ is one of the strongest factors leading to violence

Media violence

Description of a psychopaths (class)

Narcissistic, conning manipulators Unethical Grandiose Anger issues Pathological lying

The definition of APD is __________ than the definition of psychopathy

Narrower Psychopathy included emotional, neurological, and cognitive info NOT JUST BEHAVIORAL

Markers (psychopathy)

Neurological indicators that have been repeatedly found in psychopaths as reflected in electrodermal, cardiovascular, and other nervous systems

Are psychopaths mentally ill?

No

Brawner Rule

Not criminally responsible if at the time of the criminal act, person did not have capacity to appreciate wrongfulness or conform conduct to law (Emotional/Volitional Elements)

In risk assessments, clinicians often ________ dangerousness

Overpredict

Which type of schizophrenia is most associated with violent crime

Paranoid type (also persecutory type of delusional disorder)

Psychopathy is more about _____ while APD is more about _____

Personality traits; overt behaviors

Boys are more likely to engage in _____aggression and girls are more likely to engage in _____ aggression

Physical; covert or verbal

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)

Presence of sad empty, or irritable mood, accompanied by somatic and cognitive changes that significantly affect the individuals capacity to function **depressed state must last for at least 2 weeks

Criminal osychopath

Primary psychopaths who do engage in repetitive antisocial or criminal behavior

The dual process model of psychopathy

Proposes that there are two temperament contributions that interact with the social env and produce developmental pathways that ultimately lead to psychopathy 1)a low fear component (associated with affective and interpersonal factors) 2) impaired cognitive executive function (associated with lifestyle and antisocial factors)

Emotional paradox (psychopathy)

Psychopaths demonstrate normal appraisal of emotional cues and situations in the abstract but are deficient in using emotional cues to guide their judgements and behavior in the process of living

Left-hemisphere activation hypothesis (psychopathy)

Psychopaths exhibit deficits on a variety of tasks thy require activation of the left hemisphere; Flor Henry was convinced that psychopathy is closely linked to left hemisphere language dysfunction

Frontal Neuropsychological Studies on psychopaths suggest

Psychopaths may suffer from frontal lobe problems or dysfunctions

Duty to Warn

Requirement from the Tarasoff case that clinicians must actively warn potential victims of threats of serious bodily harm made by their clients

parasympathetic nervous system

Responsible for slowing down our body after a stress response.

Primary Psychopath

Robert Hare's classification of the "true" psychopathy

Which disorder is associated with "crazy behavior"

Schizophrenia

Hallucinations

Sensing or perceiving things others do not

Affective (F3 of four factor model)

Shallow emotions, callousness, little empathy, failure to accept responsibility for actions

Criticism of the PCL-R

The PCL-R may not be an adequate measure for identifying psychopaths who do not engage in violent or criminal behavior

Delusional disorder is characterized by

The presence of one or more NONBIZARRE delusions that persist for at least one month -has no psychotic symptoms

Recidivism in psychopaths

The recidivism rate of criminal psychopaths is very high -psychopaths reoffend faster, violate parole sooner, and commit more institutional violence than nonpsychopaths

Negligent Manslaughter

The unintentional killing of another human being caused by the negligence of the defendant.

Race and juvenile delinquency

There are racial differences when it comes to serious and violent crimes but not in the frequency of overall offending

Psychopaths are most likely to commit suicide when...

They feel they are stuck in "intolerable situations"

True/False: female psychopaths have lower rates of recidivism than Male psychopaths

True

True/False: most violent crimes are not committed by people who are mentally ill

True

What aspect of psychopathy may heredity contribute to?

Underarousal and low-emotional responsiveness

Lykken (1957)

____________ assessed how well people with psychopathy learned to avoid shock. Consistent with theory, people with psychopathy were poorer than controls at learning to avoid shock.

When is a person considered incompetent to stand trial

When they lack sufficient ability to consult with their lawyer and lack a reasonable degree of understanding of the court proceedings

Antisocial Process Screening Device

a 20-item rating scale designed to measure CU traits in children

Dark Triad

a cluster of personality traits that are associated with criminal psychopathy. includes psychopathy, narcissism, and machiavellianism

Factor 3

a core feature of psychopathy that refers to emotional shallowness, callousness and lack of empathy

Insanity Defense

a criminal defendant's argument that their mental illness relieves them from responsibility for a crime

Antisocial Personality Disorder

a disorder characterized by a history of continuous behavior in which the rights of others are violated

Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984

a law designed to make it more difficult for defendants using the insanity defense in the federal courts to be acquitted

Incompetent to Stand Trial

a judicial ruling that a criminal defendant, because of mental illness, defect or other reason, is unable to understand the nature and objective of the criminal proceedings or is unable to assist their defense lawyer

Boldness Trait

a key characteristic of psychopaths according to the TriPM characterized bt charisma, fearlessness, novelty seeking, calmness in the face of danger and low stress reactivity

Not Guilty by Reason of Instanity

a legal determination that a defendant was so mentally disordered at the time of the crime that they cannot be held criminally responsible

antisocial personality disorder (APD)

a pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others, occurring since age 15 -the DSM-5 criteria is followed by 7 additional criteria (any 3 or more must be met to be diagnosed) -must be 18 or older to be diagnosed and there must be evidence or behavior patterns in childhood that correspond to conduct disorder

Criminal Psychopath

a primary psychopath who engages in repetitive antisocial or criminal behavior

Iatrogenic

a process whereby mental or physical disorders are unintentional induced or developed in patients by physicians, clinicians or psychotherapists

Avoidance Learning

a process whereby someone responds in time to a warning signal in order to avoid painful or aversive stimuli

Durham Rule

a rarely used legal standard of insanity that criminal defendants are not criminally responsible if their unlawful act was the product of mental disease or defect

Sociopath

an individual who continually commits crime

Caveat Paragraph

a section of the ALI/Brawner rule that excludes abnormality manifested only be repeated criminal or antisocial conduct. It was specifically designed to disallow the insanity defense for psychopaths

autonomic nervous system (ANS)

a set of nerves that carries involuntary and automatic commands that control blood vessels, body organs, and glands (Parasympathetic and sympathetic)

Brawner Rule

a standard for evaluating the insanity defense that recognizes that the defendant suffers from a condition that substantially (1) affects mental or emotional processes, or (2) impairs behavior controls

Factor Analysis

a statistical procedure by which underlying patterns, factors or dimensions are identified among a series of scale items

Markers

a term used for the neurological indicators of a particular phenomenon, such as psychopathy

Guilty but Mentally Ill

a verdict alternative in some states that allows defendants with mental disorders to be found guilty even if they might meet standards for insanity

Developmental delay of psychopaths

abnormal EEGs of a slow wave variety

Type 1 Batterers

abuse family members

Type 2 Batterers

abuse family members because of their own emotional problems

Proactive Violence

actions undertaken to obtain a specific goal

sympathetic nervous system

activates fight or flight response

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

an anxiety disorder characterized by haunting memories, nightmares, social withdrawal, jumpy anxiety, and/or insomnia that lingers for four weeks or more after a traumatic experience

What is the age range of most muderers

between 20-29 years old

Central Nervous System (CNS)

brain and spinal cord

Homicide

causing the death of another person without legal justification or excuse

Callous-Unemotional Traits

collection of traits in juveniles believed to be precursors of adult psychopathy

Foucha v Louisiana

court ruled that insanity acquites may not be held in psychiatric facilities once they are no longer mentally disordered

General Altercation Homicide

death resulting from hostile aggression

Executive Function

higher-order mental abilities involved in goal-directed behavior

Meanness Trait

in psychopathy research, meanness is proposed as an additional feature characterizing the psychopathic personality. Refers to general cruel verbal or physical behavior towards others

Verbal dichotic listening

indicates psychopaths are less lateralized for verbal processing

Dyssocial Psychopath

individual with psychopathic characteristics who is antisocial because of social learning and doesn't possess the features of the primary psychopath

Secondary Psychopath

individual with psychopathic characteristics, but who commits antisocial acts because of severe emotional problems or inner conflicts

Aggravated Assault

inflicting, or attempting to inflict, bodily injury on another person, with the intent to inflict serious injury

Factor 1 on PCL-R

interpersonal and emotional

Four factor model

interpersonal, impulsive lifestyle, affective, antisocial tendencies

Insanity standards are based on what two criteria

irrationality and compulsion

2nd Degree Murder

killing that is done with malice, but without premeditation or deliberation

1st Degree Murder

killing that is premeditated, deliberate, and done with malice

Intellectual Disability

limitations in cognitive capacity, determined by IQ tests and a variety of performance measures

Retrograde amnesia

loss of memories from our past

Amnesia

loss of memory

SES and murder

lower SES = higher prediction of violent crime

PCL-R

most widely used instrument for the measurement of the psychopathic personality

Delusional Disorder

mental disorder characterized by a system of false beliefs or delusions

Factor 4

model of psychopathy that incorporates antisocial behavior

Spree Murder

more than one location

Felony Commission Homicdw

motivated by instrumental-controlled aggression

Homicides are broken down into two categories

murder, non-negligent mansalughter

Antisocial Tendencies (F4 of four factor model)

poor self-regulation, persistent criminal activity, antisocial behavior, early behavioral problems

Threat Assessment

process of determining the likelihood and seriousness of harm carried out by a person who displayed warning signs, such as making veiled oral or written threats

Semantic Aphasia in Psychopaths

psychopaths have poor connections between words and emotions

Triarchic Psychopathy Model (TriPM)

recent model focusing on callous-unemotional traits, disinhibition and boldness

fMRI Studies in Psychopaths

reduced activation of amygdala and vm PFC

Disinhibition Trait

refers to impulsivity, poor self-regulation, low frustration tolerance, irresponsibility, alienation and unreasonable risk taking

Violence Risk Assessment Guide

risk assessment instrument that scores on the psychopathy scale

Four classes of mental disorders mostly related to crime

schizophrenic disorders, bipolar, major depression, aspd

peripheral nervous system

somatic nervous system and autonomic nervous system

Mental Illness

term used for a variety of psychiatric diagnoses that indicate that the individual has problems in living

Adjudicative Competence

the ability to participate in a variety of court proceedings

Neuropsychology

the branch pf psychology that combines theory and research from the neurosciences and traditional psychology

Assault

the intentional inflicting of bodily injury on another person, or the attempt to inflict such injury

Competency to Stand Trial

the legal requirement that a defendant is able to understand the proceedings and to help the attorney in preparing a defense

Volitional Prong

the part of the insanity defense that requires acceptance of the possibility that a defendant could not control their own behavior to conform to the requirements of the law

Somatic Nervous System (SNS)

the part of the peripheral nervous system that controls voluntary movement of skeletal muscles

Duty to Protect

the principle that therapists must break confidentiality in order to protect a person who may be the intended victim of a client

Emotional Paradox

the research observation that psychopaths seem to be able to talk about emotional cues but lack the ability to use them effectively in the real world

Recidivism

the tendency of a convicted criminal to reoffend

Murder

the unlawful killing of one human being by another with malice aforethought, either expressed or implied

Interactive Model of Psychopaths

their biology provides a poor foundation for the formation of a conscience

What type of batterer is most common?

type 1


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