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Trait Theories

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... Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) measures personality traits ... Important influence on crime control and prevention programs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Trait Theories


1
Chapter 5
Trait Theories
2
Foundations of Trait Theory
  • The view that criminals have physical or mental
    traits that make them different or abnormal
  • William Sheldon suggested somatotype (body-build)
    makes people susceptible to delinquent behavior
  • Mesomorphs muscular/athletic (aggression)
  • Ectomorphs tall/thin (intellectual)
  • Endomorphs heavy/slow (fences)

3
Foundations of Trait Theory
  • Impact of Sociobiology
  • Sociobiology reemerged in the 1970s (Edmund O.
    Wilson)
  • Sociobiologists view the gene as the ultimate
    unit of human destiny
  • Ensuring of survival (reciprocal altruism)
  • Modern Trait Theories
  • Each offender is mentally and physically unique
  • Humans do not posses equipotentiality (equal
    potential to learn and achieve)
  • People develop physical or mental traits at birth
    or soon after that affect their social
    functioning over the life course and their
    behavior choices

4
Biological Trait Theories
  • Biosocial theorists argue physical,
    environmental, and social conditions work in
    concert to produce behavior
  • Learning Potential and Its Effect on Individual
    Behavior Patterns
  • The physical and social environment interact to
    either limit or enhance capacity for learning
  • Biochemistry and cellular interaction control
    learning
  • Instinct Some biosocial theorists contend
    learning is influenced by instinctual drives
    (rape or desire of males to control females)

5
Figure 5.1 Biosocial Perspectives on Criminality
6
Biological Trait Theories
  • Biochemical Conditions and Crime
  • Some trait theorists suggest biochemical factors
    contribute to criminality
  • Chemical and Mineral Influences Over-or
    undersupply of certain chemicals and minerals are
    associated with antisocial behaviors
  • Diet and Crime (depression, mania, cognitive
    problems, memory loss, or abnormal sexual
    behavior)
  • Sugar and Crime Linked to violence/aggression
  • Hypoglycemia blood glucose falls below necessary
    levels for normal brain functioning which has
    been linked to outbursts of antisocial behavior
    and violence.

7
Biological Trait Theories
  • Hormonal influences Some trait theorists suggest
    biochemical factors contribute to criminality
    (James Q. Wilson)
  • Abnormal levels of male sex hormones (androgens)
    and testosterone have been linked to aggressive
    behavior
  • High androgen levels increase stimulation and
    quest for thrills (left hemisphere of neocortex)
  • Hormones may explain why males age-out of crime

8
Biological Trait Theories
  • Premenstrual Syndrome PMS linked to aggression
    in females
  • Allergies Defined as unusual or excessive
    reactions by the body
  • Cerebral allergies affect the nervous system and
    produce enzymes which affect behavior
  • Neuroalergies affect the nervous system
  • Environmental Contaminants Lead, copper,
    cadmium, mercury and inorganic gases
  • Lead levels Linked to aggressive behavior
    (Deborah Denno)

9
Biological Trait Theories
  • Neurophysiological Conditions and Crime
  • Neurophysiology is the study of brain activity
  • Cases such as Charles Whitman (brain tumor) have
    focused attention on neurological impairments
  • EEG abnormalities have been linked to violent
    criminals
  • Minimal Brain Dysfunction (abnormality linked to
    cerebral structure) is manifested into episodic
    periods of explosive rage (PET scans)
  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
    has been associated with poor school performance,
    bullying, and stubbornness
  • Brain Chemistry neurotransmitters such as
    dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in low
    levels are linked to aggressive behavior

10
Biological Trait Theories
  • Arousal Theory
  • Reaction of brain function in response to
    environmental stimuli
  • Sensation seekers may include
    aggressive/violent behaviors
  • Low heart beats rates related to seeking
    stimulation

11
Biological Trait Theories
  • Genetics and Crime
  • Some trait theorists suggest personality traits
    may be genetically determined
  • XYY theory in the 1970s believed to be associated
    with violent crime in males
  • Parental Deviance children inherit criminal
    tendencies from their criminal parents
  • Sibling Similarities The effect appears greatest
    among same sex siblings
  • Twin Behavior identical twins (monozygotic)
    research suggests criminal tendencies are due to
    genes and not environment (findings are
    controversial)
  • Adoption Studies research supports a genetic
    basis for criminality (Mednick)

12
Biological Trait Theories
  • Evolutionary Theory
  • The competition for scarce resources has
    influenced and shaped the human species
  • Impulsive risk-taking behavior becomes
    intergenerational (passed down from parents)
  • Gender and Crime Most aggressive males have the
    greatest number of offspring and impact the gene
    pool
  • Rushtons Theory of Race and Evolution Migration
    produced evolutionary changes in behavior (racist
    undertones)
  • R/K Selection Theory Holds the R along a
    continuum reproduce rapidly compared to those
    along the K end who reproduce slowly
  • Cheater Theory suggests a subpopulation of men
    has evolved with genes that leads to cunning
    methods to gain sexual conquests

13
Biological Trait Theories
  • Evaluation of the Biological Branch of Trait
    Theory
  • Critics charge biological theories are racist and
    dysfunctional
  • Do not explain population differences
  • Biological explanations do not account for
    geographical variations in crime
  • Lack of empirical testing

14
Psychological Trait Theories
  • Defective intelligence (Charles Goring) Crime
    could be controlled by regulating reproduction of
    the feebleminded
  • Psychodynamic Freud suggested people carry the
    residue of childhood attachments that guide
    future interpersonal relationships
  • Id (pleasure principal) unconscious biological
    urges for food, sex and other life-sustaining
    necessities
  • Ego (reality principal) helps guide the actions
    of the Id within boundaries of social convention
  • Superego (conscience) the moral aspect of ones
    personality
  • Conflicts during psychosexual stages of
    development may lead to fixations

15
Psychological Trait Theories
  • Psychodynamics of Abnormal Behavior
  • Inferiority complex (Adler) People with a drive
    for superiority
  • Bipolar disorder Moods alternate between
    depression and elation
  • Disruptive Behavior Disorder (DBD) includes
  • Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) Defiance
    toward authority figures
  • Conduct Disorder (CD) More serious and viewed as
    severely anti-social

16
Psychological Trait Theories
  • Crime and Mental Illness
  • Some personality disorders are referred to as
    psychosis
  • Paranoid Schizophrenia Delusions of wrongdoing
    and persecution
  • Despite evidence of mental illness Recidivism
    among mentally disordered is less than the
    general population
  • Behavioral Theory
  • Human actions are developed through learning
    experiences
  • Social Learning Theory Social learning theorists
    argue that people learn aggression through life
    experiences
  • Violence is learned via behavior modeling (family
    interaction, environmental experiences, and mass
    media)
  • An event that heightens arousal (abuse)
  • Aggressive skills (learned aggressive responses)
  • Expected outcomes (aggression reward)
  • Consistency of behavior with values (aggression
    is okay)

17
Psychological Trait Theories
  • Cognitive Theory
  • Focuses on how people perceive and mentally
    represent the world around them and solve
    problems
  • Sub-categories include
  • Moral development (Jean Piaget) People obey the
    law to avoid punishment
  • Humanistic psychology Self-awareness approach
  • Information Processing How people process,
    store, encode, retrieve, and manipulate
    information

18
Psychological Traits and Characteristics
  • Personality and Crime
  • Personality is the reasonably stable patterns of
    behavior, thoughts, and emotions that distinguish
    one person from another.
  • Research has identified personality traits such
    as extroversion and introversion (Eysenck)
  • Antisocial personality/psychopathy/sociopathy
    are antisocial persons suffering defects or
    aberrations
  • Research on personality Minnesota Multiphasic
    Personality Inventory (MMPI) measures personality
    traits and may give clues to criminality.

19
Psychological Traits and Characteristics
  • Intelligence and Crime
  • Some early trait theorists argued that criminals
    have a below average IQ
  • Nature Theory (Goddard) argues that intelligence
    is determined genetically
  • Nurture Theory argues that intelligence is
    primarily sociological
  • IQ and criminality Reemerged in 1977 with
    research by Travis Hirschi and Michael Hindelang.
  • Cross national studies Research with Danish
    children suggest a relationship between IQ and
    delinquency
  • Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray suggest
    criminal offenders have an average IQ of 92
  • Critics charge the link between IQ and
    criminality is weak

20
Figure 5.2 Psychological Perspectives on
Criminality
21
Public Policy Implications of Trait Theory
  • Important influence on crime control and
    prevention programs
  • Primary prevention programs seek to treat
    personal problems before they manifest into
    criminal behavior
  • Secondary prevention programs provide treatment
    after one has violated the law
  • Use of mood-altering chemicals such as lithium,
    pemoline, imipramine, phenytoin, benzodiazepines
    are sometimes used to control behavior
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