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Brain Development of the Psychopath

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Title: Brain Development of the Psychopath


1
Brain Development of the Psychopath Session 5
2
Phineas gage
The strange case of Phineas Gage
  • Gage was a railroad construction supervisor in
    1848 when a tamping rod was driven through his
    skull by an explosion
  • The tamping rod severed the connections in the
    frontal area
  • Prior to the accident he was a moral,
    hardworking, sensitive, conscientious,
    intelligent, and well liked
  • Following the accident, his personality changed
    lying, swearing, fighting, drinking,
    extravagance, seizure prone,
    and antisocial

3
MRI pix
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imagery (FMRI)
4
Stroop color word test
5
Pruning MRI
Time-lapse imagery of brain age 5 to 20
Use it or lose it!
Note red shows more gray matter while blue shows
less gray matter. Gray matter wanes as the brain
matures and neurons are pruned. Areas for basic
function mature early higher executive functions
later.
6
Brain serotonin
Antisocial behavior the brain
  • Impulsive, violent emotions appears to be a
    failure of emotional regulation
  • ASP shows impairment in the orbito-frontal cortex
    (impulse control, judgment, tact) and its
    connections with anterior cingulate cortex
    (conflict coping) amygdala (fear anger)
  • Abnormalities in serotonin function
  • Early neglect (sensory deprivation) trauma
    abuse affects the development of the brain
  • During 1st three years the brain grows rapidly,
    later prunes unused areas
  • Result poor impulse control, lack of
    socialization, poor empathy, reactivity

7
Lykken study startle
Normal people show fear, startle, and avoidance
reactions to painful stimuli psychopaths dont
8
Non-reactivity to Emotional Stimulation
9
Frontal brain
10
Stress
Effects of Stress Trauma on the Brain
  • Long term exposure to stress violence produces
    high level
    of fear hormone, cortisol (reduces
    connections may shrink
    hippocampus)
  • High stress homes, multitasking technology
    (computer games)
    more often produce short attention (ADHD)
  • Verbal abuse (repeated yelling, scolded,
    criticized) has adverse
    effects on the limbic
    (emotional) system, likely through stress
    pathways
  • Physical and/or sexual abuse increases limbic
    system dysfunction including olfactory
    hallucinations, visual disturbances, déjà vu,
    jamais vu
  • Repeated recollection and obsessing can intensify
    the stress effects
  • Physical/sexual abuse or neglect is associated
    with decrease in the size of the hippocampus
    (working memory) in adulthood
  • Stress tends to short-circuit frontal lobe
    processing (what little there is) and switch to
    emotional processing (resulting in
    over-sensitivity)
  • Such impairments may make the challenges of
    school even more stressful a vicious cycle

11
Drugs
12
Reading emotion
Reading Emotion Normal Youth
  • Youth seem to do nothing but socialize, yet are
    poor readers of emotion
  • Undeveloped prefrontal cortex plays role in
    assessment of social relations, planning, and
    impulse control in social relations
  • Compared with adults (100), teens (50) have
    greater difficulty correctly identifying
    emotional facial expression
  • This confusion may lead to misinterpretation
    inappropriate reaction
  • Girls somewhat more accurate than boys boys
    misinterpret cues
  • Deep emotional relationships comes from ability
    to read subtle cues
  • When one observes a close friend receiving a
    shock, although the sensory cortex does not
    activate, the emotional one does

When reading emotion, teens (left) rely more on
the amygdala, while adults (right) rely more on
the frontal cortex.
  • Conduct Disordered Youth
  • Errors in evaluating motive and intent
  • Misinterpret social cues
  • Attribute hostile intentions
  • Tease others but respond negatively to others
  • Abnormal standards and expectations regarding own
    behavior

13
Treatment considerations for the
psychopath Session 6
14
Practical Hands On Interventions
Or-- when you just cant use duct tape
15
PCL-YV
Psychopathy Checklist Youth Version
Factor 1
Factor 2
16
System map of traits
Possible pathways among traits
Stimulation seeking
Low fear, anxiety
High pain threshold
Low motivation to anticipate consequences
Opportunist (versatility)
Inability to anticipate, learn, insight
Poor planning, present orientation, unrealistic
Predatory
Limited cognitive capacity, inattention
Impulsiveness
Early behavior problems
Poor identification with others
Parasitic Irresponsible Aggressive Callous
No remorse, shame, guilt, embarrassment
Narcissism grandiosity
Poor social attachment
Superficiality Promiscuity Short term relations
Charm glibness
Verbal fluency
Manipulation Lying
17
Rules of the road
  • Be calm
  • Be respectful even when they are not
  • Have a few clear rules
  • Give clear, direct, simple messages
  • Be consistent
  • Avoid confrontations in front of others
  • Start fresh every day
  • Give choices
  • Use positive reinforcers whenever possible
  • Dont sweat the small stuff

18
Practical In-class Interventions
  • Anger Management
  • Where and How my Body Feels Anger
  • Defining the actual feeling
  • Anger management workbooks
  • Swearing worksheet / identify alternatives to
    swear words

19
Parental contribution to empathy
Parental contribution to empathy
  • Secure attachment nurturing responsiveness to
    infant, available,
    sensitivity, consistency
  • Take children seriously respect feelings,
    preferences, questions
  • Practice cooperating demonstrating collaboration
    rather
    than competition
  • Guiding explaining value sharing, caring,
    helping, explain why prosocial behaviors are
    important and appreciated, how aggressive and
    selfish behaviors harms others, intervening when
    child is selfish or cruel, explain how others
    feel
  • Modeling generosity, charitable to others,
    practice what preached, small acts of kindness
  • Promoting and praising prosocial self image
    encourage opportunities to experience caring
    helping, view self as caring and helping,
    volunteering, internal rather than external locus
    of control for altruism

20
Components of Empathy Enhancement for Juvenile
Offenders
  • Ability to identify and express emotions
    Identification of
    feelings prior to, during and after offenses
  • Development of good listening skills in order to
    be able to identify feelings of others may need
    to break this down into nonverbal cues, voice
    tone, etc. depending extent of deficit
  • Constructing a series of apologies to his victims
  • Dealing with own victimization
  • Comprehension of how anger, stress and values
    influence his reactions to others
  • Modification of behavior out of concern for
    others feelings
  • Used to address the lack of awareness of the
    devastating short and long term emotional impact
    that the assault had on the victim(s)
  • To reduce the consistent pattern of blaming the
    victim for the assault address the lack of
    remorse for the assault
  • Increase ability to understand how others feel
    and how intimate relationships are based on
    empathy and trust
  • To reduce inappropriate behaviors and increase
    boundary awareness

21
Examples of Empathy Techniques
  • Practice reading the nonverbal cues of

    others in order to assess emotions
  • Describe feelings experienced by

    fictional people pictures, movies, etc
  • List ways of demonstrating empathy
  • Write an account of the assault from the victims
    perspective
  • Identify emotions that the victim felt before,
    during and after the assault
  • Outline the consequences of the lack of empathy
    in relationships

22
Time bomb tactics
Time-Bomb Tactics
23
Thinking errors (1) errors
Thinking Errors Irresponsibility is fostered by
ten thinking errors. These errors exist in
varying degrees in various individuals. The more
extreme the degree of
irresponsibility the more thinking errors are
involved.
  • Closed Thinking
  • is not receptive
  • is not self critical
  • makes no self disclosures
  • lies by omission
  • is good at pointing out and giving feedback on
    the faults of others
  • Victim stance
  • views self as a victim (but not as the
    victimizer)
  • Blames others (his/her family, childhood, social
    conditions, the past, etc.)
  • Viewing Self As A Good Person
  • focuses only on own positive attributes
  • fails to acknowledge own destructive behavior
  • builds self up at the expense of others
  • Lack of Effort
  • is unwilling to do anything found boring or
    disagreeable
  • uses I cant which really means I wont

24
Thinking errors (2)
  • 5. Lack of interest in Responsible Performance
  • finds responsible living to be unexciting and
    unsatisfying
  • responds only if netting an immediate payoff
  • no sense of obligation
  • 6. Lack Of Time Perspective
  • does not use the past as a learning tool
  • expects others to act immediately on demand
  • decisions are made on assumptions, not facts
  • 7. Fear Of Fear
  • has irrational fears but refuses to admit them
  • has a fundamental fear of injury or death
  • has a profound fear of put downs
  • experiences "zero state" (feels worthless when
    held accountable)
  • 8. Power Thrust
  • has a compelling need to be in control of every
    situation
  • uses manipulation and deceit
  • refuses to be dependent unless someone can be
    taken advantage of

25
Thinking errors (3)
  • 9. Uniqueness
  • thinks of self as different and better than
    others
  • expects of others that which s/he fails to do
  • cuts fear of failure with super optimism
  • quits at the first sign of failure
  • 10. Ownership Attitude
  • perceives all people, places, and things as
    objects to possess
  • has no concept of the ownership rights of others
  • uses sex for power and control, not intimacy

26
Criteria for successful treatment
  • the criminal must hit "bottom" before the program

    can work
  • the criminal must accept that he is and always
    will be a
    criminal. He will always need habilitative
    practice
  • the change agent must make an effective
    presentation to the criminal at a time when the
    criminal is vulnerable and willing to change
  • the change agent must have a detailed knowledge
    of the criminal's thinking process. It is
    imperative that the agent know specifically with
    whom he is dealing
  • the change agent must apply the knowledge
    appropriately to the change process
  • the offender is receptive to criticism if he is
    employed,
  • responsible and reliable is drug-free
  • responsible with time and money
  • receptive to constructive criticism and is
    constantly striving to improve

27
Effectiveness of corrective thinking
Effectiveness of Corrective Thinking
  • High risk clients
  • 66 reduction in crime for those who completed
    the program.
  • 33 reduction in crime for those who entered but
    did not complete.
  • 48 of all clients pursued no new crime.
  • 29.4 exhibited a decrease in crime.
  • 6.4 showed no change.
  • 15.6 exhibited an increase in crime.
  • Average number of criminal charges
  • Reduced by slightly over 50 for all clients who
    entered the program.
  • Reduced approximately 66 for those who completed
    the program.
  • Reduced by approximately 33 among clients
    terminated before completion.
  • Reduced 79.17 for those who completed and had no
    previous arrests.
  • Reduced 36.36 for those who terminated prior to
    completion with no prior arrests.

Truthought's Corrective Thinking Treatment Model
includes four studies done by University of
Wisconsin, US Department of Justice National
Institute on Corrections, US Department of
Justice Bureau of Justice Assistance (1988-1993)
28
Relapse Prevention
Family support Supervision Structure Consistency N
urturance
  • Stress
  • Peer influence
  • Vulnerability
  • Substance compromise

Scapegoating Continued conflict Poor role
modeling Lack supervision
29
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