Results 81 to 90 of about 47,121 (288)
ABSTRACT Objectives Counter‐empathy involves responding to others' assumed emotions incongruently. Research on dispositional counter‐empathy predominantly focuses on specific counter‐empathic constructs without clearly mapping its cardinal dimensions.
Jake R. Siamro, Christian H. Jordan
wiley +1 more source
Effect of MAOA promoter polymorphism and neuropsychological performance on psychopathy traits
Introduction: Psychopathy is a personality disorder characterized by affective and antisocial traits. The defining features of psychopathy are risk factors to present violent behavior.
C. Romero-Rebollar+4 more
doaj +1 more source
The HCR-20 as a measure of reliable and clinically significant change in violence risk among secure psychiatric inpatients [PDF]
Objective Periodic structured violence risk assessment is the principle method underlying treatment planning for mentally disordered offenders but little is known about how risk changes over time.
Dickens, Geoffrey L., O’Shea, Laura E.
core +3 more sources
The Last Word: The Prattling, Tattling Parrots of Popular Lore
ABSTRACT Garrulous parrots appear in a wide array of pop culture forms—from urban legends, television sitcoms, and advertising, to comics, pulp detective fiction, and jokes (naming a few). The birds can be helpful, clever agents; but more often they are mischief makers challenging social norms. Among the pandemonium of parrots in expressive culture, we
Greg Kelley
wiley +1 more source
Examining the Association Between Psychopathy Clusters and Risk-Taking Behaviors
Introduction Psychopathy encompasses the sub-dimensions of interpersonal manipulation, callous affect, erratic lifestyle, and criminal tendencies. Most studies investigating this trait have traditionally utilized a variable-centered approach.
R. Gómez Leal+2 more
doaj +1 more source
Offenders with psychopathy have often committed crimes violating social norms, which may suggest a biased moral reasoning in psychopathy. Yet, as findings on utilitarian decisions remain conflicting, the current study investigated different aspects of ...
Sina eRadke+5 more
doaj +1 more source
Managing Psychopathic Employees [PDF]
[Excerpt] What if a small but definable subset of the employee population were responsible for a major share of corporate crime and ethical breaches? If so, then developing policies that target them would improve the firm’s performance, not to mention ...
Langbert, Mitchell B.
core +1 more source
Counter-intuitive moral judgement following traumatic brain injury [PDF]
Several neurological patient populations, including Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), appear to produce an abnormally ‘utilitarian’ pattern of judgements to moral dilemmas; they tend to make judgements that maximise the welfare of the majority, rather than ...
Alexander, Timothy+3 more
core +1 more source
Does reflection reduce the epistemic side‐effect effect? A new challenge to error accounts
The epistemic side‐effect effect consists of an asymmetric pattern of knowledge attributions in harm and help cases, paralleling the Knobe effect for intentionality attributions. Error‐based accounts suggest the asymmetries arise from performance errors in harm cases. We challenge this claim with three new experimental studies designed to reduce errors.
Bartosz Maćkiewicz+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Psychopathy facilitates workplace success [PDF]
Psychopathy may be related to some adaptive outcomes in the workplace environment. This phenomenon is called corporate psychopathy and it is based on the assumption that the corporate environment positively selects for psychopathic features, especially ...
Pavlić Igor, Međedović Janko
doaj