Title: Antisocial Personality Disorder, Psychopathy,
1 Antisocial Personality Disorder,Psychopathy,
Mentalization
-
- Glen O. Gabbard, M.D.
- Brown Foundation Chair of Psychoanalysis
- and
- Professor of Psychiatry,
- Baylor College of Medicine
2DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria for 301.7Antisocial
Personality Disorder
- There is a pervasive pattern of disregard for a
violation of the rights of others occurring since
age 15 years, as indicated by 3 (or more) of
the following - Failure to conform to social norms with respect
to lawful behaviors as indicated by repeatedly
performing acts that are grounds for arrest - Deceitfulness, as indicated by repeated lying,
use of aliases, or conning others for personal
profit or pleasure - Impulsivity or failure to plan ahead
3DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria for 301.7Antisocial
Personality Disorder (cont.)
- Irritability and aggressiveness, as indicated by
repeated physical fights or assaults - Reckless disregard for safety of self or others
- Consistent irresponsibility, as indicated by
repeated failure to sustain consistent work
behavior or honor financial obligations - Lack of remorse, as indicated by being
indifferent to or rationalizing having hurt,
mistreated or stolen from another
4DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria for 301.7Antisocial
Personality Disorder (cont.)
- The individual is at least age 18 years
- There is evidence of conduct disorder with onset
before age 15 years - The occurrence of antisocial behavior is not
exclusively during the course of schizophrenia or
manic episode
5Items in the Hare Psychopathy Checklist Screening
Version (PCLSV)
- Factor 1 Interpersonal/Affective
- Superficial
- Grandiose
- Manipulative
- Lacks remorse
- Lacks empathy
- Doesnt accept responsibility
- Factor 2
- Social Deviance
- Impulsive
- Poor behavior controls
- Lacks goals
- Irresponsible
- Adolescent antisocial behavior
- Adult antisocial behavior
- Hare et al. 1995
6Psychopathy and ASPD inCriminal Populations
- About 60-75 of prison inmates meet DSM IV
criteria for ASPD - About 1/3 of those meet Hare criteria for
Psychopathy - Hence 20-25 of the prison population are likely
to be psychopaths -
-Coid 1998
7Neurobiological Findings
- 25 psychopaths were compared with 18 BPD subjects
and 24 controls. - Psychopaths had decreased electrodermal
responsiveness, absence of startle reflex, and
less facial expression. - Conclusion Psychopaths have a pronounced lack of
fear and a general deficit in emotion processing. - - Herpertz et al, Arch Gen Psych 58737-745, 2001
8Neurobiological Findings (cont.)
- Compared with healthy subjects and psychiatric
control subjects, patients with ASPD have an 11
reduction in prefrontal gray matter. - This structural deficit may relate to low
autonomic arousal. - - Raine et al. Arch Gen Psych 57119-127, 2000
9- GENE-ENVIRONMENT
- INTERACTION
- AND
- ETIOLOGY
10Dunedin Study
- A birth cohort of 1037 children
- (52 male)
- Assessed at ages
- 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 18, 21
- 96 intact at age 26
- -Caspi et al Science 297851-854, 2002
11Dunedin Study (cont.)
- 8 experienced severe maltreatment
- 28 experienced probable maltreatment
- 64 experienced no maltreatment
12Dunedin Study (cont.)
- Males with low MAOA activity genotype who were
maltreated in childhood had elevated antisocial
scores - Males with high MAOA activity did not have
elevated antisocial scores, even when they had
experienced childhood maltreatment
13Dunedin Study (cont.)
Childhood Maltreatment
14Differential Parenting and Antisocial
Behavior708 Families Were Studied with at Least
2 Same-Sexed Adolescent Siblings
- 93 with monozygotic twins
- 93 with dizygotic twins
- 95 with ordinary siblings
- 181 with full siblings in stepfamilies
- 110 with half siblings in stepfamilies
15Differential Parenting and Antisocial Behavior
(cont.)
- 130 with genetically unrelated siblings in
stepfamilies - Data on parenting style were collected by
questionnaire and by video recording of
interactions between parents and children - Almost 60 of variance in adolescent antisocial
behavior and 37 of a variation in depressive
symptoms could be accounted for by conflictual
and negative parental behavior directed
specifically at the adolescent
16Parenting Adolescent Antisocial Behavior
- 720 families with at least 2 children were
assessed regarding whether latent genetic factors
interact with parent-child relationships in
predicting adolescent antisocial behavior. - Risk of antisocial behavior in adolescents was
characterized by means of a genetically informed
design. - -Feinberg et al, Arch Gen Psych 64457-465, 2007
17Parenting Adolescent Antisocial Behavior (cont.)
- The central finding was that parental negativity
and warmth moderate the influence of genetic
factors on adolescent antisocial behavior. - Genetic influence on antisocial behavior was
greatest at higher levels of parental negativity
and low levels of warmth. - -Feinberg et al, Arch Gen Psych 64457-465, 2007
18- A CLINICALLY USEFUL
- CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM
19Antisocial Personality Disorder
BPD/ASPD True Psychopath Successful
(Impulsive (Premeditated Psychopath
Reactive Nonreactive Aggression)
Aggression)
20- BPD/ASPD Co-Morbidity
- Impulsive Reactive Aggression
21Co-Morbid ASPD/BPD Patients
- Emotional states aroused in the context of an
attachment relationship lead to pre-mentalizing
modes of organizing experience - The coherence of self-experience is destroyed and
violence is possible. -
- -Bateman Fonagy, J Clinical
Psychology In Session
64181-194, 2008 -
22Co-Morbid ASPD/BPD Patients (cont.)
- These patients inflate their self-esteem by
demanding respect from others, controlling the
people around them, and creating an atmosphere of
fear. - The shame associated with loss of self-esteem is
experienced in psychic equivalence mode where the
patient must do something immediate - - Bateman Fonagy, J Clinical
Psychology In Session
64181-194, 2008 - - Gilligan 2000
23Co-Morbid ASPD/BPD Patients (cont.)
- Recognition of the other as having a separate
mind inhibits violence. - Common path to violence is the momentary
inhibition of the capacity for mentalizingmentali
zation protects against violence.
24Antisocial Individuals
- Those with impulsive aggression, rather than
proactive or premeditated aggression, have the
same brain findings as BPD patients volume loss
and decreased activity of the frontal cortex,
especially of OFC and increase of subcortical
activity, including the amygdala. - -Roth
and Buchheim in press
25- TRUE PSYCHOPATHY
- Premeditated Nonreactive Aggression
26- The average psychopath will commit four crimes by
the age of 40. - Almost all research on psychopathy involves
males, and little is known about
psychopathy in females.
27Neurobiological Features of Psychopathy
- Reduced autonomic responses to aversive stimuli
- Lack of fear
- Deficits in emotion processing
- -Roth Buchheim in press
28Neurobiological Features of Psychopathy (cont.)
- Decreased volume of frontal and hippocampal areas
- Decreased frontal metabolism including OFC and
ACC - Increased amygdalar activity
- No impairment in intellectual cognitive abilities
- -Roth and Buchheim in
press
29Do Psychopaths LackEmpathy?
30Empathy Psychopathy
- Psychopaths have better understanding of the
suffering of others, but they have no concern for
the pain of others. - Mentalizing abilities are spared in psychopaths
TMET scores are similar to those of healthy
subjects. - -Blair
2005
31Empathy Psychopathy (cont.)
- Psychopaths are able to recognize emotions in
faces, but they disconnect that recognition from
their own emotions. - They do terrible things to other people because
they are unlike healthy subjects they do not
share the pain they inflict. - Psychopaths have a deficit in emotional empathy,
i.e., they lack compassion and concern not the
capacity for mentalization. -
32- It was as if they could only understand emotions
linguistically. They knew the words but not the
music, as it were - -Robert Hare 2008
33 34Successful Psychopaths
- Often called white collar psychopaths, the
designation refers to those who have been
undiscovered so far. - They demonstrate even greater autonomic
reactivity than controls and unsuccessful
psychopaths. - -Ishikawa et al,
2001 -
35Successful Psychopaths (cont.)
- Unsuccessful psychopaths have a 22 reduction in
prefrontal gray matter volumes, while healthy
controls and successful psychopaths do not. - Decreased prefrontal volume may result in poor
decision-making and unregulated compulsive
behavior that contributes to unsuccessful
psychopaths getting caught. - Yang et al,
2005
36Successful Psychopaths (cont.)
- The combination of normal prefrontal volume and
high autonomic functioning may allow successful
psychopaths to react sensitively to environmental
cues signaling danger and therefore to avoid
conviction. They have good intelligence, good
understanding of norms and intact motor
empathybut they lack emotional empathy.
37Successful Psychopaths (cont.)
- Professions most likely to attract psychopaths
- Law enforcement
- The military
- Politics
- Medicine
- Most agreeable vocation for psychopaths is
business. - - Hare, 1993
38Successful Psychopaths (cont.)
- Corporate culture encourages psychopathy.
- Traits such as ruthlessness, lack of social
conscience, and single-minded devotion to success
are instrumental to business. - The capacity to read people is very useful.
- -Hare
1993
39Psychopaths generally regard moral transgressions
as more serious than other transgressionsbut
they are far less likely than controls to make
reference to the victim of the transgression
when justifying why moral transgressions are
bad.
- Blair, Cognition 571-19, 1995
40- IMPLICATIONS
- FOR
- PREVENTION
41Family-Based Preventive Intervention for
Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial Behavior
- Low salivary cortisol levels have been related to
conduct problems and antisocial behavior. - Early life social experience may alter cortisol
release. - -Brotman et al., Arch Gen Psych 641172-1179, 2007
42Family-Based Preventive Intervention for
Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial
Behavior (cont.)
- 92 preschool-aged siblings of delinquent youths
were randomized to one of two groups - 1) 22 weekly group sessions for parents and
- preschoolers, and 10 biweekly home visits
- conducted during a 6-8-month period
- OR
- 2) A control condition consisting of
assessments and monthly telephone calls. - -Brotman et al., Archives of General Psychiatry
641172-1179, 2007
43Family-Based Preventive Intervention for
Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial
Behavior (cont.)
- Salivary cortisol levels were measured before and
after a social challengeentry into an unfamiliar
peer group. - Relative to controls, children in the
intervention condition had increased
cortisol levels in anticipation of the peer
social challenge. - -Brotman et al., Archives of General Psychiatry
641172-1179, 2007
44Family-Based Preventive Intervention for
Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial
Behavior (cont.)
- CONCLUSIONS
- A family-based preventive intervention for
children at high risk for antisocial behavior
alters stress response in anticipation of a peer
social challenge. - The experimentally induced change in cortisol
levels parallels patterns found in normally
developing low-risk children. - -Brotman et al., Arch Gen Psych 641172-1179, 2007
45Family-Based Preventive Intervention for
Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial
Behavior (cont.)
- Some research on conduct disorder suggests a
neural deficit involving a reduced capacity to
engage the amygdala and associated circuitry when
encountering social threat cues. - One possibility is that alteration of the HPA
axis assists in modulating aggression and
increasing amygdala activation in response to
threat. - -Brotman et al., Arch Gen Psych 641172-1179, 2007
46- TREATMENT OF
- ADULT
- ASPD PATIENTS
47Positive Prognostic Factors
- Presence of depression
- Presence of anxiety
- Ability to form a therapeutic alliance
- Any superego development whatsoever, including a
socially desirable need to rationalize antisocial
acts
48Clinical Features that Contraindicate
Psychotherapy of Any Kind
- A history of sadistic, violent behavior toward
others that resulted in serious injury or death - A total absence of remorse or rationalization for
such behavior - Intelligence that is either in the very superior
or mildly mentally retarded range - A historical incapacity to develop emotional
attachments to others - An intense countertransference fear of predation
on the part of experienced clinicians even
without clear precipitating behavior on the part
of the patient
Based on Meloy, 1988.
49Countertransference with antisocial patients
- Denial
- Collusion
- Assumption of psychological complexity
- Excessive therapeutic zeal
50Countertransferencewith antisocial patients
(cont.)
- Shame and humiliation at being duped
- Hatred and contempt
- Loss of professional identity and therapeutic
nihilism - Fear of assault or harm
51Overview of Treatment
- No body of controlled efficacy research
- Some with positive prognostic features may be
treatable under certain circumstances - Therapist must be stable, persistent and
thoroughly incorruptible - Therapist must repeatedly confront the patients
denial and minimization of antisocial behavior - Therapist must help the patient connect actions
with internal states - Confrontations of here-and-now behavior are more
effective than interpretations of unconscious
material from the past
52Overview of Treatment (cont.)
- Countertransference must be rigorously monitored
to avoid acting out by the therapist - Therapist must avoid having excessive
expectations for improvement - Identify any axis I treatable conditions
- Identify situational factors that worsen
antisocial behaviors - Recognize the likelihood of legal problems and
legal entanglements - Do not begin treatment unless it is demonstrably
safe and effective for both patient and clinician