Authors
Martin L Lalumière, Grant T Harris, Marnie E Rice
Publication date
2001/3/1
Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior
Volume
22
Issue
2
Pages
75-92
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Psychopaths are manipulative, impulsive, and callous individuals with long histories of antisocial behavior. Two models have guided the study of psychopathy. One suggests that psychopathy is a psychopathology, i.e., the outcome of defective or perturbed development. A second suggests that psychopathy is a life-history strategy of social defection and aggression that was reproductively viable in the environment of evolutionary adaptedness (EEA). These two models make different predictions with regard to the presence of signs of perturbations or instability in the development of psychopaths. In Study 1, we obtained data on prenatal, perinatal, and neonatal signs of developmental perturbations from the clinical files of 643 nonpsychopathic and 157 psychopathic male offenders. In Study 2, we measured fluctuating asymmetry (FA, a concurrent sign of past developmental perturbations) in 15 psychopathic male …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ML Lalumière, GT Harris, ME Rice - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2001