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Are Psychopaths 'Brain-Damaged'?

Psychopaths Brain

  Posted: 12/ 6/2011 11:21 am

By Gary Stix
(Click here for the original article)

We all have a ghoulish fascination with the Hannibal Lecters of this world. That’s because many of the most-publicized stories about psychopaths can be quickly banged into a Hollywood script. One of the most absorbing accounts that I’ve come across recently, however, was in an advance reading copy of a book by Paul J. Zak, due in May, called The Moral Molecule. The book, which deals largely with the hormone/neurotransmitter oxytocin and its role in social interactions, has a section on the psychopath.

Zak is a noted researcher on oxytocin, sometimes called “the love hormone” for its role in fostering trust and empathy. (See the article by Zak on trust in the June 2008 issue of Scientific American.) His studies have chronicled how various social disorders have been linked to disruptions of the chemical’s normal functioning. In one chapter, he recounts how former computer programmer and entrepreneur Hans Reiser, now a resident of a state penitentiary, had killed his wife and then went on to request an appeal of his conviction. Citing Zak’s research, Reiser claimed that his attorney during the trial had suffered from a brain dysfunction that produced abnormal levels of oxytocin and therefore displayed insufficient empathy to represent Reiser in court. Sorry, Hans. Nice try.

The bizarrely intricate reasoning of the psychopath is what fascinates. And it is not just the prison cell where these stories can be found. The psychopathic personality type turned up in Shakespeare and the Greek tragedies. And Occupy Wall Street could have a field day: among the 1 percent of the population characterized as psychopaths, a not insignificant number are thought to occupy the corporate suite. A recent study conducted by New York psychologist Paul Babiak showed that one in 25 business leaders may meet the criteria for classification as psychopaths.

Imaging and other research are creating an emerging picture of what’s happening right behind your forehead, the seat of “executive function” that governs self control. (picture the area right around the Ash Wednesday spot, the Hindu tilaka or, perhaps most appropriately in this context, the mark of the beast from the Book of Revelations).

The retinue of brain-scanning technologies has been put to work to reveal the neural superhighways that stretch from the executive control center in the frontal lobes back to other, more primal areas, deeper in the brain. To do these studies often requires schlepping a magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, machine on a tractor trailer into a prison, where about a quarter of the population meets the criteria for psychopath as established by Robert Hare from the University of British Columbia. (See “Inside the Mind of a Psychopath in in Scientific American Mind by Kent A. Kiehl and Joshua W. Bucholtz.)

Perhaps the latest and one of the best examples of this inside-the gates, inside-the mind research appeared in the November 30 Journal of Neuroscience, when Kiehl, Joseph Newman (a heavyweight in this area), and colleagues Michael Koenigs and Julian Motzkin reported on 20 diagnosed psychopaths and 20 other non-psychopaths who had committed similar crimes and were housed at the Fox Lake Correctional Institution in Wisconsin. The researchers used two types of imaging—one of the integrity of the white matter in brain-cell connecting fibers and a second of brain activity itself. The study’s most important finding centered on impairments in the link between the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (a control node for regulating emotion, threats, decision-making and social behavior) and the amygdala, a locus of emotional processing.

Koenigs, who studies brain injuries in this area of the frontal cortex, knows that damage there can often produce alterations in personality. In theory, the faulty interaction between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex could fail to provide the proper negative emotional cue that robbing a bank or a ripping off a friend is just not kosher. Further tests are needed to confirm the implications of this breakdown in communication in the brain’s internal social network.

This finding, though, could also extend work by Newman that indicates that psychopathy may result from what he calls an “attention bottleneck.” Psychopaths may focus fixedly on one goal and ignore all other social cues, perhaps even signals sent over the prefrontal-to-amygdala pathway. Remember, Anthony Hopkins’s stare in the poster for the movie?

The study of psychopathy has profound implications for the criminal justice system. If psychopaths are, in fact, brain damaged in some sense, will the law have to be changed to allow them to enter an insanity defense? (See “Neuroscience in the Courtroom” by Michael S. Gazzaniga in April 2011.) Both lawyers and scientists will inevitably have to accommodate these shifts in our understanding of the brain’s workings. The University of Wisconsin, in fact, has just established a program that will allow students to earn a law degree while at the same time procuring a doctorate in neuroscience. Imagine the courtroom of tomorrow: “Your honor, I would like to enter this diffusion tensor image of my client’s ventromedial prefrontal cortex.”

Source: University of Wisconsisn School of Medicine and Public Health

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By Gary Stix (Click here for the original article) We all have a ghoulish fascination with the Hannibal Lecters of this world. That’s because many of the most-publicized stories about psychopath...
By Gary Stix (Click here for the original article) We all have a ghoulish fascination with the Hannibal Lecters of this world. That’s because many of the most-publicized stories about psychopath...
 
 
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
12:24 PM on 12/09/2011
at best, the concept of "psychopath" is a condition, not an identity.

just because you use high tech equipment doesn't mean you can't be on a witch hunt.

we might want to revisit our definition of psychopathic as catastrophic failure to empathize, since that would include to various degrees practically everybody at one time or another, as well as all of our for-profit corporations, now that they are people too.

likewise, inescapable prophesies of evil and doom for a person's future conduct or capacity is more akin to the art of a palm reader than the work of a scientist.

in theatre or in fiction, prophesies can become true or not depending entirely on the designs of the author.

similarly, psychologic prophesies regarding human nature and fate can be declared true, depending on the designs of a psychologist.

is this way, psychology - and in this case donning the costume of science - is a creative art, a blend of theatric performance and popular fiction.
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aceshigh11
Nowhere is the dreamer or the misfit so alone
11:10 AM on 12/07/2011
People too often mix up the terms "psychotic" and "psychopath"...

A person suffering from psychosis is literally schizophrenic, in that they can't tell the difference between fantasy and reality. It's a very serious condition and requires medication.

A psychopath is something completely different...psychopaths have no conscience. They're not insane...it's a destructive personality type that's very dangerous, and because they're not insane, it's difficult, if not impossible, to treat.
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aceshigh11
Nowhere is the dreamer or the misfit so alone
11:08 AM on 12/07/2011
I would say that most politicians are clinical psychopaths. One simply cannot attain the level of statewide or national office without being completely conscience-free.

Too many people need to be stepped on and destroyed along the way...any normally-functioning human being simply couldn't handle the guilt associated with such behavior.
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11:04 PM on 12/06/2011
If psychopaths are brain-damaged and not responsible for their dangerous behavior, they would still have to be jailed for life in an institution for the criminally-insane. They surely cannot be "cured".
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07:22 PM on 12/06/2011
Wall Street is the most dangerous psychopath in the world.
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loveis22984
ah wah wrong wi yah
02:33 AM on 12/07/2011
I studied finance and I agree 100%.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluegirl424
Do the right thing
06:34 PM on 12/06/2011
I heard there was a study about a common ear demographic with psychopaths; low set, large or prominent ears were suspected to correlate with the diagnosis.
05:26 PM on 12/06/2011
Since I am not very fluent in my speech..... am I going to be branded a psychopath?, BUT I'm not, Because and Since I am a really nice person, I tend to think a lot about what I say before I say it. Now you brand me a psychopath?
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
08:56 AM on 12/07/2011
most psychopaths are fluent with their speech, and also very nice people, on the outside. people are often taken in by their charm.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
05:22 PM on 12/06/2011
the difference between a psychopath and a war hero is one is trained, encouraged, equipped and authorized to kill as many of a certain kind of people as he can, while the other acts without any such authorization.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
08:56 AM on 12/07/2011
not really.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
10:33 AM on 12/07/2011
yes really, and why not?

the above ascriptions of psychopath certainly involve political calculations, whether or not we care to admit it.

among the worst sorts of politics are those that deny their political nature, and instead elevate themselves into objective, benevolent moralities in action, unfortunately necessary and overdue.

politics is a place where the gruesome deeds of mass murders, "devoid of empathy" for their victims, can not only be excused, but celebrated.

religion is also such as place, especially in the west.
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hereisallie
What a long strange trip it's been...
10:43 AM on 02/29/2012
What is your definition of a "war hero". The heros are the ones who are self-sacrificing, willing to risk life and limb to save their fellow soldiers. The ones who will throw themselves on a grenade, to carry out the wounded under fire, the ones that put themselves in harm's way to save their buddies.
While a soldier may be trained to kill, they do so against their own instincts. This is why many suffer from PTSD. They do feel empathy and suffer from remorse. A psychopath feels neither, and has no such instincts not to kill.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
01:17 PM on 02/29/2012
" While a soldier may be trained to kill, they do so against their own instincts. This is why many suffer from PTSD. They do feel empathy and suffer from remorse. A psychopath feels neither, and has no such instincts not to kill.”

no, what revolts individuals about the horrors of war is not their "instincts", but rather their healthy and functioning conscience, which arises (or not) according primarily to the individual's previous social experiences. there are no biologically bad characters, despite apparent claims by psychology to the contrary. evil doers are only our creations. all characters result from cultivation over time. the only person with the potential to be born "a psychopath" from the gitgo, so to speak, is a legal person, e.g., a corporation.
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kamachanda
Mr. President, Tear this Wall Street down!
04:26 PM on 12/06/2011
Part two, can psychopathic behavior be taught? I suspect it can be, I suspect it is much more prevalent than "one in 25 business leaders" and may exist in the general population to a somewhat lessor extent.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
05:19 PM on 12/06/2011
"can psychopath ic behavior be taught?"

we'd have no wars without it.
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Zilo
Indie--The GOP opposes critical thinking
04:23 PM on 12/06/2011
I had a boss that I wouldn't be surprised was a psychopath...He was also a pastor. Very creepy guy.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
05:24 PM on 12/06/2011
those two often go together as both are about manipulation, exploitation, and control.
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bluegirl424
Do the right thing
06:26 PM on 12/06/2011
I bet everyone has had a psychopathic boss. The creepiness factor is always there.
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SecularJoe
If a belief gives you comfort then it is suspect
04:19 PM on 12/06/2011
Being able to explain why a person could carry out a heinous crime is not the same as excusing the heinous crime. In fact it might even confirm why, given the state of their brain, such a person must be removed from society for good.

Some of the conclusions at the end of the article are a little dim-witted.
03:05 PM on 12/06/2011
Are sociopaths brain-damaged? I don't know. IMHO, it's sociopathic to hoard without limit while so many fellow citizens, if not humans, are struggling for survival and basic health. Are the 1%, or .1% of the sociopaths here in this country brain-damaged?

Or are they simply inculturated, well-taught by a value system which prizes money above all else.
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07:24 PM on 12/06/2011
Probably both.
02:58 PM on 12/06/2011
you mean sociopaths. psychopaths are the ones who say the devil came out from their morning cereal box and told them to harm someone
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Pinkasaurus
03:15 PM on 12/06/2011
No, those would be people with psychotic disorders.
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WhereIsTheTruth
We need more chlorine in the gene pool!
03:43 PM on 12/06/2011
Like psychopaths? :-)
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11:10 PM on 12/06/2011
Not sure if this is true but I have heard that psychopaths are more manipulative and organized. Sociopaths are disorganized and given more to inappropriate public behaviors. I believe the lack of empathy and conscience are pretty much the same.
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02:56 PM on 12/06/2011
psychopaths like Newt Gringrich
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06:28 PM on 03/02/2012
As in "LIKE" ?
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shirlyujest
02:55 PM on 12/06/2011
Wow...I'm impressed. Thank you HP for a thought provoking article that is NOT written for the comprehension level of a fifth grader. It's nice that you acknowledge that some of your readers are adults with a modicum, at least, of an education.