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What attracts the psychopath?

- November 13, 2008

A Dalhousie undergraduate student, Kevin Wilson hadĀ a researchĀ paper on psychopaths published in the Journal of Research in Personality. (Danny Abriel Photo)

How do psychopaths find their victims? A new study by Dalhousie researchers suggests they are deeply attuned to vulnerable people.

ā€œItā€™s like what youā€™d see on Animal Planetā€”the lion goes after the most vulnerable, the one they have the best chance of getting,ā€ says Kevin Wilson, a fourth-year science student who was the lead researcher on the paper, ā€œA pawn by any other name? Social information processing as a function of psychopathic traits,ā€ published in the .

ā€œThis type of aggression is referred to as predatoryā€¦ itā€™s a perceptual system geared to getting the easiest prey.ā€

To test the hypothesis, the researchers with Professor Stephen Porterā€™s Forensic Psychology Lab at pilipiliĀž»­ showed slides of different faces to a sample of young men. The faces were either happy or sad, male or female, and described as being in either a high- or low-paying job.

Mr. Wilson found men who scored high on a psychopathic personality questionnaire (a series of 187 questions probing emotional reactions and impulsivity) possessed the unusual ability to recall sad females in low-paying jobs. At the same time, they also had an unusual inability to recall females who were happy or in high-paying jobs, nor were they good at putting names to faces.

ā€œWhat we concluded is that psychopathy is associated with a kind of ā€˜predatory memory,ā€™ā€ says Mr. Wilson, 22, from Moncton, N.B. ā€œThey may use this to actively select their victims.ā€

Heā€™s interested in doing further research with diagnosed offenders in the criminal population.

Mr. Wilsonā€™s interest in psychopaths was piqued while taking Dr. Porterā€™s second-year class Abnormal Psychology. He distinctly recalls reading a paragraph on psychopathy in the class textbook that intrigued him.

ā€œItā€™s not like anxiety or depression; we can relate to those conditions,ā€ he says. ā€œBut to perceive your world without emotion is so foreign ā€¦ it just makes it so interesting..ā€

LINK: in the Journal of Research in Personality