Title of article :
Deficient Behavioral Inhibition and Anomalous Selective
Attention in a Community Sample of Adolescents
with Psychopathic Traits and Low-Anxiety Traits
Author/Authors :
Jennifer E. Vitale، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Socialization is the important process by which individuals learn and then effectively apply the
rules of appropriate societal behavior. Response modulation is a psychobiological process theorized
to aid in socialization by allowing individuals to utilize contextual information to modify ongoing
behavior appropriately. Using Hare’s (1991) Psychopathy Checklist and the Welsh (1956) anxiety
scale, researchers have identified a relatively specific form of a response modulation deficit in lowanxious,
Caucasian psychopaths. Preliminary evidence suggests that the Antisocial Process Screening
Device (APSD; Frick & Hare, 2001) may be used to identify children with a similar vulnerability.
Using a representative community sample of 308 16-year-olds from the Child Development Project
(Dodge, Bates, & Pettit, 1990), we tested and corroborated the hypotheses that participants with
relatively low anxiety and high APSD scores would display poorer passive avoidance learning and
less interference on a spatially separated, picture-word Stroop task than controls. Consistent with
hypotheses, the expected group differences in picture-word Stroop interference were found with male
and female participants, whereas predicted differences in passive avoidance were specific to male
participants. To the extent that response modulation deficits contributing to poor socialization among
psychopathic adult offenders also characterize a subgroup of adolescents with mild conduct problems,
clarification of the developmental processes that moderate the expression of this vulnerability could
inform early interventions.
Keywords :
Psychopathy , response modulation , Socialization , adolescents
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology