Abstract

According to the physiological animal model proposed by Gorenstein and Newman (1980; see also Newman, Gorenstein, & Kelsey, 1983), psychopaths and extraverts may be characterized by a common psychological diathesis related to behavioral inhibition (see also Fowles, 1980; Gray, 1982). One aspect of this diathesis involves deficient passive avoidance learning, which has been central to explanations of "unsocialized" (e.g., Trasler, 1978) and antisocial behavior (e.g., Hare, 1970). Results from three experiments supported our prediction that psychopaths and extraverts would exhibit deficient passive avoidance relative to nonpsychopaths and introverts, respectively. In addition, the passive avoidance deficit was particularly evident in tasks that required subjects to inhibit a rewarded response in order to avoid punishment. The latter finding may be important for explaining the inconsistent results regarding passive avoidance learning in psychopaths (e.g., Chesno & Kilmann, 1975; Schmauk, 1970). Discussion of the results focuses on the importance of reward in mediating the passive avoidance deficit of "disinhibited" individuals and on the existence of an indirect relationship between psychopathy and extraversion: one that is consistent with the observed experimental parallels as well as with the more ambiguous evidence regarding a direct correlation between measures of the two syndromes.

Keywords

DisinhibitionPsychologyPsychopathyExtraversion and introversionDiathesisImpulsivityPunishment (psychology)Developmental psychologyAntisocial personality disorderSocial psychologyPersonalityPoison controlBig Five personality traitsNeuroscienceInjury prevention

MeSH Terms

AdolescentAdultAntisocial Personality DisorderAvoidance LearningDiscrimination LearningExtraversionPsychologicalFemaleHumansInhibitionPsychologicalJuvenile DelinquencyMaleMiddle AgedMotivation

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1985
Type
article
Volume
48
Issue
5
Pages
1316-1327
Citations
358
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

358
OpenAlex
16
Influential
260
CrossRef

Cite This

Joseph P. Newman, Cathy Spatz Widom, Stuart Nathan (1985). Passive avoidance in syndromes of disinhibition: Psychopathy and extraversion.. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology , 48 (5) , 1316-1327. https://doi.org/10.1037//0022-3514.48.5.1316

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037//0022-3514.48.5.1316
PMID
3998992

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%