Abstract

Startle-elicited blinks were measured during presentation of affective slides to test hypotheses concerning emotional responding in psychopaths. Subjects were 54 incarcerated sexual offenders divided into nonpsychopathic, psychopathic, and mixed groups based on file and interview data. Consistent with findings for normal college students, nonpsychopaths and mixed subjects showed a significant linear relationship between slide valence and startle magnitude, with startle responses largest during unpleasant slides and smallest during pleasant slides. This effect was absent in psychopaths. Group differences in startle modulation were related to affective features of psychopathy, but not to antisocial behavior per se. Psychopathy had no effect on autonomic or self-report responses to slides. These results suggest an abnormality in the processing of emotional stimuli by psychopaths that manifests itself independently of affective report.

Keywords

Moro reflexPsychologyReflexModulation (music)Cognitive psychologyNeuroscience

MeSH Terms

AdultAffective SymptomsAntisocial Personality DisorderArousalDefense MechanismsHumansMalePersonality AssessmentReflexStartleSex OffensesSocialization

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1993
Type
article
Volume
102
Issue
1
Pages
82-92
Citations
662
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

662
OpenAlex
42
Influential
585
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Cite This

Christopher J. Patrick, Margaret M. Bradley, Peter J. Lang (1993). Emotion in the criminal psychopath: Startle reflex modulation.. Journal of Abnormal Psychology , 102 (1) , 82-92. https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-843x.102.1.82

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037/0021-843x.102.1.82
PMID
8436703

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%