Here’s the headline for the cover story in the September/October issue of Scientific American Mind magazine:
Inside the mind of a psychopath
Neuroscientists are discovering that some of the most cold-blooded killers aren’t bad. They suffer from a brain abnormality that sets them adrift in an emotionless world.
The authors of the article are Kent A. Kiehl and Joshua W. Buckholtz. Dr. Kiehl is the researcher who examines the brains of psychopaths in prison using fMRI technology. Lovefraud wrote about him before in Psychopaths, crime and choice.
This latest article, Inside the mind of a psychopath, is an excellent overview of the personality disorder. It summarizes the characteristics of psychopaths, with chilling anecdotes to describe their behavior. It briefly explains the biology of the disorder—describing areas of the brain that are abnormal. It explains research that has shed light on different aspects of how psychopaths differ from the rest of us.
The article is well-written, thorough and understandable. In it, Kiehl and Buckholtz write specifically about the individuals who meet the definition of a psychopath used by researchers in the field: someone scoring at least 30 out of 40 on the Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R).
I can understand this limitation from a research perspective, but for society as a whole, it’s a problem.
Psychopathy Checklist Revised
The PCL-R was developed by Dr. Robert Hare, and the article includes a summary of how it works. The evaluation covers 20 behaviors and traits. A clinician assigns a score of 0, 1 or 2 for each item, based on how well the description matches the subject.
The scores are based on both an interview with the subject, and a review of the information in his or her file. This is critical, of course, because psychopaths can be extremely charming in an interview, and conveniently forget to talk about their malignant histories.
The PCL-R evaluates the following behaviors and traits:
Antisocial behavior
- Need for stimulation and proneness to boredom
- Parasitic lifestyle
- Poor behavioral control
- Sexual promiscuity
- Lack of realistic long-term goals
- Impulsivity
- Irresponsibility
- Early behavior problems
- Juvenile delinquency
- Parole of probation violations
Emotional/interpersonal traits
- Glibness and superficial charm
- Grandiose sense of self-worth
- Pathological lying
- Conning and manipulativeness
- Lack of remorse or guilt
- Shallow affect
- Callousness and lack of empathy
- Failure to accept responsibility for own actions
Other factors
- Committing a wide variety of crimes
- Having many short-term marital relationships
The maximum score on the PCL-R is 40, which means that the person was rated as 2”—a reasonably good match—”on every item. To be considered a true psychopath, an individual must have a score of 30.
Prevalence of psychopaths
The criteria used by researchers to diagnose psychopaths is stringent, so the total number of people who have this disorder comes out as far lower what we usually talk about here on Lovefraud.
Here’s what the article says about the prevalence of psychopaths in society:
• People with the disorder make up 0.5 to 1 percent of the general population.
• When you discount children, women (for reasons that remain a puzzle, few women are afflicted), and those who are already locked up, that translates to approximately 250,000 psychopaths living freely in the U.S.
• Some researchers have estimated that as many as 500,000 psychopaths inhabit the U.S. prison system.
• Between 15 and 35 percent of U.S. prisoners are psychopaths.
• Psychopaths offend earlier, more frequently and more violently than others, and they are four to eight times more likely to commit new crimes on release.
• Kiehl recently estimated that the expense of prosecuting and incarcerating psychopaths, combined with the costs of the havoc they wreak in others’ lives, totals $250 billion to $400 billion a year.
Psychopathy continuum
What does the article say about people who may not qualify as card-carrying psychopaths, scoring less than 30 out of 40 on the PCL-R? Not much. A box accompanying the article, called Do you know a psychopath?, contains the only reference:
The thing is, everyone falls somewhere on the psychopathy continuum. The average person scores about a 4, but there are plenty who rank in the teens and 20s—not high enough to receive an official diagnosis, yet possessing significant (and often noticeable) psychopathic tendencies—the bullying boss, the drifter, the irresponsible guy who is always milking the generosity of friends and lovers.
Now, I don’t know who wrote the paragraph above—the authors of the main article, Kiehl and Buckholtz, or some editor at Scientific American Mind magazine. But the overall effect is that scope and danger of the psychopathy problem is significantly underplayed. The question is, why?
Low-ball estimates
What is to be gained by low-balling the prevalence of this personality disorder in society?
I don’t know how many of us were involved with someone who would score 30 or more on the PCL-R. But I am willing to say that most of us have experienced something significantly more damaging than, “the bullying boss, the drifter, the irresponsible guy who is always milking the generosity of friends and lovers.”
Maybe we were with people who would have scored between 10 and 29. Dr. Liane Leedom recently reported that another psychopathy researcher, Dr. Reid Meloy, says people who score between 10 and 19 have a “mild psychopathic disturbance” and people who score between 20 and 29 have a “moderate psychopathic disturbance.” Why does Kiehl ignore them?
And how about all the women who exhibit these traits? Why did Kiehl and Buckholtz give them a blanket exemption? And children? Dr. Robert Hare acknowledges that psychopathic traits can be seen in children. He’s even developed a version of the PCL-R that can be used to evaluate children as young as age 12.
The bottom line is that many psychopathy researchers work with prisoners. It’s easy to understand why—prisoners are literally a captive audience. Plus, I imagine that funding is available.
But this focus on the worst of the worst, those locked up for truly heinous crimes, vastly underestimates the danger of people with psychopathic traits, even if they don’t cross the 30-point threshold. And this is really bad for society.
Read Inside the mind of a psychopath on TheMindInstitute.org.
Link supplied by a Lovefraud reader.
Better yet!
He …umm….bare ass’d himself.
In my worldly logic. I want to tell the men who um…bare ass’d me, by making a public scene with me, where I just wanted to run and hide from the watching eyes, and embarrassment. I am quite capable of embarassing myself….. I don’t need your help.
Dear Jeannie,
Yeppers he did! And HE would have appreciated your calling it “bare ass’d himself” LOL The only time I ever saw him not appreciate a good pun or play on words was ONE time when it was about his BIG NOSE (most of the time that wasn’t a problem) but P-son when he was about 15 made a REALLY GOOD off the cuff pun about my husband’s large nose and it made hubby irritated…which wouldn’t have been so bad except I got tickled and started laughing and then he got mad, and then I started BRAYING and choking and snorting and snarfing and BRAYING AGAIN and would have to stop to get my breath and the look on his face was enough to get me to BRAYING AGAIN, it was so funny and the madder he got the more I brayed and the more I brayed the madder he got! Of course, the P-son loved that he had made such an uproar! LOL Hubby got over his mad (he couldn’t stay mad long, but we laughed about that til he died and I’m laughing still!)
Hey Howday All,
You make a good point about dance. The hunting grounds hmmm? Yes, where else can a spath behave the way women want, be seductive, and then tell the woman, “you imagined it, I was only dancing?” Next partner! Tango Anyone?
I loved to dance. I dated a dance teacher (NOT a bf, just dating for fun.) The teacher liked dancing with me b/c I learned quickly, I was a good partner that helped with his classes. So I loved the flow, the movement, the feeling of dance partnership.
My BF (before marriage) knew this. As a couple, we took dance lessons. One day when he was boasting about his dance talent and my lack of being able to keep up with him, I made the mistake of teasing him about the real problem; he couldn’t find the beat of a song, not at all and so was hard to follow. He knew the words, just not the music (wasn’t that prophetic!). I didn’t mean anything bad. I mean…I can’t sing. NOT a note. I am SO tone deaf that even I can hear how badly I sing. So, who cares? Not being able to sing doesn’t make me less of a person right? To me, his not being able to hear the rhythm of a song didn’t matter. To prove me wrong, he asked his folk dance teacher who replied “What? A good dancer? Well, you were an ENTHUSIASTIC dancer.”
BUT it did matter to my husband. He nurtured that slight for 15 years when his cousins enouraged and helped me sneak around my back to dance lessons where he met eager woman who knew he was married but were happy to partner with him dancing on and OFF the floor. He LOVED the revenge. When I found out, he was triumphant. THEY said he was the best dancer ever. SO many women think they are different. ALL thought a married man was appropriate relationship material. For a couple of years, the phone had lots of hang up calls and I couldn’t understand why (he went dancing on the nights he was visiting his cousin). God, there were so many horny women that came out of the woodwork from those dance classes. He had nearly all of them and those women in return were just as triumphant to my face as he was, when they gloated about being the chosen ones he preferred over me.
A slimey troll. Trolling for horny trolls. Lots and lots of trolls.
Ox Drover, your post got me laughing! It reminded me of a line on the Cosby show. Bill Cosby was telling his youngest daughter that people made fun of her name cause there is nothing wrong with her (nothing to make fun of) The little girl asked him if people made fun of his big nose. He said no, that didn’t happen until years later…..
Katydid,
My ex-husband always held a grudge. He said I laughed at him while we danced and he never danced with me again. Maybe I did laugh? But, we were together since I was 17. From 1978 to 1993. Was he holding something against me that I did as a teenager?
We were at a wedding. His cute cousin kept running over to ask him to dance. I didn’t care at first. I started to get pissed-off after the 5th time they danced.
I was left alone while he was running off with his cousin!
I tried telling him that he is my escort, not his cousin’s excourt. She couldn’t get a date, and that is not his responsibity. He didn’t listen. He belittled me as he defended his cousin.
The next time he danced with her….I got between them…. to dance with him.
I had a broken toe at the time (thanks to him) I was running away from him and stubbed my toe on the sewer cover in apartment parking lot and broke my toe.
Now I am dancing with him while wearing one surgical shoe on the right foot, and a dress shoe on the left.
Like I say….I am quite capable of embarrassing myself…I don’t need any help.
He played gang-up on me.
He complained to his family. His entire family came down on me to bitch me out. “HE WAS JUST DANCING WITH HIS COUSIN!!!”
Katydid, any man that acts like this is a cheater. He values everyone else, but not his wife…
Troll is SUCH a good word for them!! It encompasses spouses, offspring, parents, other family members, acquaintances – the whole gamut.
I’ve mentioned before about a revolting next-door neighbour who only recently moved on (still in town, but no longer next to ME). He lived there a year and as soon as he couldn’t push me around (3 months into his tenancy), he began (and continued until the day he moved) a campaign of stalking and harrassment that made all of the “bad neighbour” stories you’ve seen on TV look like a walk in the path. One day I’ll write about it; I’m still not sure if he is a sociopath or just drug-*****d. Either way, it was dreadful. The police are waiting for me to give another statement before they charge him with aggravated stalking (very serious offence here, likely to end in a prison-sentence, particularly in view of the fact that he has already spent time inside on drug and violence charges). I’m a bit scared of pressing the charges, but I’m even more worried that if I do nothing, he’ll burn my house down or I’ll come home one day and find all of my pets poisoned.
I have always called him “The Troll” – I even forget myself at times and call him that when talking to the cops, but it’s okay – they know who I mean now!
Jeannie, My husband was NOT a handsome man, even when he was young, but all women from age 6 to 96 loved him, because he made THEM FEEL GOOD ABOUT THEMSELVES…he was a hoot too and we laughed and laughed all the time..he had a great sense of humor (most of the time) and more good beef and peels of laughter went across my dining room table than any slab of wood I know! I never knew how many people or whom he would be bringing home for dinner! He never met a stranger! Funny thing was though, everyone perceived him as “quiet” except for me, and he and I were always chattering about something! Gosh I miss that guy! Missing him and the fun we had, the companionship and the love was what put me so vulnerable to the P BF when he came along….but now I can miss my husband without being “sad” feeling. It almost feels more like he is just “out of town for a few days” and he’ll be back soon. If that makes any sense. I can think of all the great times we had, even some of the funny times like the one I described about the nose comment! and Enjoy those times all over again.
I think you are right though about how long they can hold a grudge, and any “narcissistic injury” to their ego, ESPECIALLY if it is something they deep down know is true—like not a good dancer, or whatever the injury was–and they recruit their dupes to stand up for them, like yours did his family. Obviously a little incest with his cousin was okay as long as they kept it in the FAMILY! LOL
Dear Jeannie, I’ll see your “bad neighbor” and raise you a “nut-job” named Crazy Bob! Put yer money where yer mouth is!
Ox Drover,
What a good man you husband was. I ache just thinking about the love you had. I never had that love with a man. Never
I was not with a handsome man either. I thought that looks brings on arrowgance. (spell) I was so wrong. Not only did I get ulgy on the outside, but I got ulgy on the inside.
I wasn’t taught how to pick a man.
Ox Drover?
My bad neighbor? Actually I do have a bad neighbor. We call him “Bob the mooch”. He pretends to want to do work in exchange for beer or cigarettes. Then he acts like he never saw a broom before. “What is that?” he asks….