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.
PS> I had a veru good day today… I was actally comfortable in my own skin and went shopping! SIGH!!!!
Hey notcrazee. I bet it will be awhile before Kim get’s back online with moving and internet service, hooking up puter etc. and beside’s she need’s to make her nest and not focus on the spathology so much.. a new place a new start…maybe she and pinky doodle are busy rocking on the porch and smelling petunias..let’s hope this move put’s her in a better place so to speak. Notcrazee I am so happy you had a good day in your skin, now that is a good thing, you just keep on keepin on and you will soon have all those dark clouds behind you..
NotCrazee1,
Sorry honey but you’re not hearing me. I’ve already tried. They weren’t interested. There’s drug stuff all over. Which do they pursue? Certainly not the one with the crazy wife making accusations against a historic pioneer family.
KD,
If you have to make changes for your own well being in the face of that certain, dangerous and arrogant oversight, then do it.
Who cares what any one else thinks about it. The Spath won’t!
I read this article and your story and can’t help but be outraged at the determination to keep these disordered in society and to pretend they are not what they are.
I am reminded in a flash of fury about what my experience was and the notion that there is anyway the victims might be made responsible for the spath. We are not. And we are not like them.
Only researchers who have shared the experience, only lawmakers with a personal history can know. And I can not wish it on them. But rather hope that they who do know, like Dr Leedom, will raise their voices higher and higher.
I read this article and your story and I am inspired by the notion that even those of us who are crazy or what ever else we are accused of are still strong enough to call the thing what it is.
Don’t give up your truth. Know that the changes you need now in how others think and see the situation from from the outside will come. One day, it will be undeniable. I hope most sincerely on that grim day, that you will be long gone and happy as you should be.
THat historic family sounds like a bunch of bullies. The take away honor from the families and the descendants of a great nation’s history and soil it for personal interest.
Being someone whose ancestors were ALL here at least two generations before the Revolution, I certainly take no pride nor comfort from hearing about this family. In history, we as a people have shared a common goal “Liberty and Justice for All”.
Anyone who claims legacy as grounds for denying it to anyone else on the basis of that legacy is a bully and the antithesis to what that commonality amoung us all ever was.
They are a disgrace. And they will be found out because one day they are really going to cross the line.
I hope when it happens, you are NOT there,
“The thing is, everyone falls somewhere on the psychopathy continuum. The average person scores about a 4”
I am actually DEEPLY OFFENDED by this idiotic comment and would like to see the “proof” from which it was drawn!
Just tested the spath; disconnected myself from any emotion and approached it like a business deal, so I didn’t “load him up” out of bitterness. Result? Truly, really, irrevocably a 33. I’ve only ever heard that he was a “good little boy” and was “no trouble”, so I gave him zeros for those things. Also, I wasn’t sure how many crimes would qualify as a “wide variety”, so I went easy and gave him a “1”. He could possibly score even higher if I knew more about his childhood..
Then I tested ME, because I was affronted at the thought that a rearcher could imagine for one second that I had ANY of those traits or had done ANY of those things. I don’t and I haven’t. I was a zero and I would defy anyone who knows me to find otherwise. This does not mean that I think I’m special or wonderful or better than anyone else (except, of course, the spaths…)(every ONE of us is better than any ONE of them…)
So there you silly researchers – stick THAT in your pipe and smoke it!!!
Yup. Yup.
And beware: Dare you point one out, your insight will be a little bitty pearl before swine; they will turn, and tear you to pieces.
Dear Aussie girl,
The “average” person is the number at which half of people scored fall BELOW that number and half fall above that number—-the word average also is the same as the “mean” number, so you scoring zero is not unusual, there are others who score a zero. Scoring a 4 or a 6 is not a person who is even very dysfunctional. None of us are perfect for sure! It is the people that are 10-19 and the ones 20-29 that are seriously problematic.
I don’t think these researchers are totally off the mark, but they must realize that Just because they are working with convicts doesn’t mean the ones that are NOT convicts are not “just as bad” and that they ALL HAVE CHOICES—and should be held 100% accountable for their behaviors. If the psychopaths are not accountable, then NO ONE IS.
One thing I learned is that you really have to LISTEN when you meet someone, to what they tell you about their childhood. My xbf told me that he was abandoned by his mom, at age ten. She left 10 children, all by different fathers!, and he has NO idea who his father is. He was raised by his maternal grandmother, who taught him that masturbation was BAD, and who raised four of the children like an army seargant! She was strict and abusive and they feared her…and they lived in poverty. He was VERY vague about the details of some “father figure” who lived nearby, who taught him that a man’s conscience is in his penis!!, along with other “warped” things.
When he told me these things, and that he never dealt with his abandonment issues, (in fact, he refused to tell me anymore, or even talk about it, except that he felt that his grandmother raised him right!) I should have KNOWN that he has MANY deep-rooted issues! For one, he told me he never masturbated in his life, when we met. THIS told me that he is NOT normal..either lying or has repressed feelings..which is why he is probably addicted to porn and oversexed….(which he ADAMANTLY lies about…trying to put on a mask of a “decent man”…which he always says that he is!
Anyway, my point is…that HIS upbringing is almost exactly like Ted Bundy’s! Yet, I thought that he turned out ok, since he became a police officer and got a college degree!
I NEVER trusted his word…he was always “saying” things and never action to back up his words! He walked into work, where I met him, and bragged about how he isn’t into porn, and is a gentleman, etc…. Noone normal has to do that!
So, even though he has a good “reputation”, so he says, around town, etc…the people at work see right through him because he is too ignorant to fool everyone!
My point is that you really need to LISTEN to what someone says…When they tell you they have had a bad background, and never faced it in therapy….there is ALOT repressed that they are taking out on all they meet and encounter! They can’t be normal with abandonment issues that they didn’t face. It will come out eventually.
my X told me all these story’s of abandoment, said his grandparents raised him but then the hyper religious grandmother disowned him when he told her he was gay..but then I talked to his mother and she said that was a lie. and he is not gay he is bi-sexual – as time goes by we simply dont know what to believe..hey I have issues, deep rooted childhood issues, i have examined them, went to therapy..but I am still damaged goods..i have baggage, not as heavy as it was but I have issue’s.. I was willing to help him with his issue’s, I did help him..but now I am not sure if he had issue’s at all, I think he tapped into mine and used that miror to get what he could…..yep it was a dance alright..wow they lead when we think they are following..a fool’s dance – me being the fool. I will dance alone from here on out, just me and the moon..
Dear Henry,
The difference is that YOU HAVE A CONSCIENCE…he does NOT. You had pity on him because you knew what it was to be abused as a child, and your empathy and pity for him was genuine.
He DREAMED UP THE ABUSE and did mirror into yours! HE LIED.
You still keep beating yourself up because you are not perfect (BOINK!!!) but you are a good man, you’ve made some bad choices at times (God knows I sure have!) but you are not EVIL, he is. You do not enjoy hurting others, lying to others and betraying others. HE DOES!