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What is psychopathy and what are we doing about it? | Dan Komar | TEDxJuniataCollege

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    Hello.
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    So, today, I'm going to be talking
    about what psychopathy is, the term,
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    and what we're doing about it
    here at Juniata College.
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    So, I'll begin by saying
    in the fall of 2016,
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    our lab in the Psychology Department,
    under Professor Rebecca Weldon,
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    was attempting to ascertain some
    of these features underlying psychopathy
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    and how they relate
    to student populations.
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    We found, consistent with the hypothesis
    called the distress-specific hypothesis,
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    which I'll talk about in a little bit,
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    that participants who were
    higher in psychopathy,
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    which is this empathic deficit,
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    were slower in recognizing
    the fearful faces of other people,
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    and I'm going to discuss
    the implications of this.
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    Now, in the fall of this school year,
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    we wanted to try something else,
    we wanted to question the impossible.
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    The fact is that there very few
    treatments for psychopathy,
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    and we wanted to see
    if we could alter this effect,
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    this delay in recognizing
    the fearful faces of other people,
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    by priming empathy,
    or something like empathy,
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    in those people who were
    higher in psychopathy.
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    I think in order to understand
    what I mean by "psychopathy,"
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    we should discuss how the term
    has been sensationalized in the media.
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    So, in pop culture in Hollywood,
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    there is this thing that has been coined
    the "elite psychopath."
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    So, I'll tell a bit about what that is,
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    but first, I think I should give
    some examples.
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    Such characters as Hannibal Lecter,
    Patrick Bateman from American Psycho,
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    or the most recent television
    adaptation of Sherlock Holmes,
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    all of these could qualify
    as this elite psychopath caricature,
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    and it's problematic in a number of ways.
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    These characters are
    antiheroes at the core.
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    So you are invited to empathize
    with these protagonistic characters
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    who never really do show
    empathy to other people.
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    And so, of course, we want
    to emulate these characters.
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    But as a matter of fact,
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    they do show some
    of the qualities of psychopathy.
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    They are cold, calculating, apathetic,
    they're sophisticated,
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    but they're also some things
    that we don't really see as often
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    in actual psychopathy.
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    They're one step ahead
    of the competition, always,
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    they are Machiavellian masterminds,
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    and that's not something we really see.
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    So I'm going to talk about how
    psychopathy has been characterized
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    in the field of psychology,
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    and those components will be differences
    in action and differences in the brain.
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    Also, I think it's important
    to note that in the DSM-5,
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    which is a terminology manual
    for Psychology,
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    antisocial personality disorder has been
    considered synonymous with psychopathy.
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    While it shares some common symptomology,
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    we will be considering psychopathy
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    in accordance with a different set
    of features and facets
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    that set it apart ever so slightly
    with antisocial personality disorder.
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    But I should start by saying
    in antisocial personality disorder,
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    we see symptoms like aggression,
    outward aggression,
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    that can be generalized,
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    this impulsiveness,
    sensation-seeking behavior,
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    recklessness and association
    with criminal behavior.
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    So let's talk about some of these.
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    There's a lack of guilt or remorse.
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    There's a lack of emotional expression.
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    These symptoms are affective
    or emotional processing differences.
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    Our study focused mainly on these.
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    So people who are high in psychopathy
    will tend to be callous,
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    a bit like the pop culture representation.
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    They will lack emotional expression,
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    so they won't be expressing
    emotions to other people.
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    There's also a lack
    of prosocial emotional response,
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    which means in day to day interaction,
    when someone is showing distress,
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    you are expected
    to behave in a certain way;
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    they don't do this.
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    There are also differences
    that are interpersonal in nature.
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    They manipulate other people,
    they use them as a means to an end.
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    And there is grandiosity as well,
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    or an exaggerated sense
    of self-importance.
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    This is also seen in psychopathy,
    in people who are high in psychopathy.
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    There's a last piece, and that piece is
    sensation seeking and impulsivity.
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    This is not so much seen
    in the elite psychopath caricature.
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    People who are high in psychopathy
    will act impulsively,
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    they will seek sensation and they will not
    duly consider risk versus reward.
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    And so, often, they will
    commit criminal acts
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    and subsequently be incarcerated.
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    When they seek sensation,
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    they have to calculate
    this risk versus reward,
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    they have to actively weigh the risk
    versus reward in order to make the action,
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    but we don't really see this
    in people who are high in psychopathy.
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    And of course there is
    that aggression piece,
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    this generalized aggression.
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    So, people who are high in psychopathy
    have difficulty determining
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    victims versus victimless crimes.
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    And so, when they commit these crimes,
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    they do not duly consider the potential
    impact this might have on another person.
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    So let's talk about some of the brain
    differences we see in psychopathy.
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    Mainly, we'll talk about the amygdala,
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    which is an area of the brain
    near the center of the brain,
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    and there's less activation in people
    higher in psychopathy, in this region,
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    when they are looking
    at the emotions of other people,
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    specifically distress emotions.
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    And that's important
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    because when you're not processing
    the distress of other people,
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    perhaps you're not also feeling
    the guilt and remorse
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    that a normal person
    would typically experience
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    when they can tell those people
    are experiencing those emotions.
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    So, when there's less activation in people
    who are high in psychopathy,
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    this area of the brain, the amygdala,
    involved in emotional processing,
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    again shows less activation.
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    So, what's the importance
    of studying psychopathy?
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    Well, there is this linkage
    between psychopathy and crime.
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    If you look at the literature
    on psychopathy,
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    you will find that most
    participants are inmates.
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    This is not a coincidence.
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    It is far more prevalent
    in prison populations.
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    It's been estimated anywhere
    from 50% to 80% of inmates could qualify
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    for some symptomology in psychopathy
    that is above the norm.
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    Outside of prison populations,
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    a much less percentage could be
    considered high in psychopathy.
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    It has been estimated anywhere from 1.3%
    to 6.85% of men in the general population,
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    mainly in the United States,
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    could qualify as having some symptomology
    associated with psychopathy,
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    whereas in women, it is 0.8%.
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    So considerably less
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    could be considered to qualify
    for the symptoms of psychopathy.
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    It is also important to study psychopathy
    because at this time,
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    treatments for psychopathy
    have been largely unsuccessful.
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    This is because treatments
    like cognitive and behavioral strategies
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    require some kind of agency
    or willingness to change,
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    in participants, or patients.
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    People who are high
    in psychopathy, unsurprisingly,
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    seem to lack this agency
    and willingness to change,
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    and so the treatments
    are largely unsuccessful.
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    So what is being done?
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    Well, currently, our lab,
    here at Juniata College,
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    is working on this
    distress-specific hypothesis,
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    which is that the affective symptoms,
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    the emotional processing
    symptoms of psychopathy,
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    could be responsible for this deficit
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    in processing the distress
    emotions in other people.
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    So we thought, "What if we could
    prime them for a congruent emotion,
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    and maybe that could,
    maybe, alter this effect,
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    this delay in processing
    the emotions of other people?"
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    So we used something called the
    autobiographical emotional memory task,
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    which challenges a participant
    to recall a time in their life
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    where they felt a specific emotion.
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    We used fear.
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    So our participants recalled a time
    in their life where they experienced fear,
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    and because of this,
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    it may be that fear becomes
    more salient, it's more accessible,
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    it's more easy to recognize
    in other people.
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    So if we could take participants,
    people who are high in psychopathy,
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    and prime them for this fear,
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    they may subsequently be better able
    to recognize that fear in other people.
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    And if our findings support this,
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    it may be that priming
    for a congruent emotion
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    could be a way, through exposure,
    to condition an empathic response
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    in people who would otherwise
    lack such a response.
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    In other words, we could foster
    empathy in psychopaths.
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    And this would be groundbreaking
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    because incarceration in our country
    is at an all-time high,
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    and if we could somehow minimize this
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    through developing strategies to address
    people who have psychopathic symptoms,
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    before criminal behaviors
    can begin to manifest,
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    we might be able to deal
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    with the current dilemma
    that is psychopathy in our country.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What is psychopathy and what are we doing about it? | Dan Komar | TEDxJuniataCollege
Description:

Psychopathy is traditionally conceived of as a psychological disorder marked by affective, interpersonal and behavioral facets. Villains in pop culture demonstrate those characteristics, and so do inmates. Daniel Komar, a senior at Juniata College studying Psychology, unveils the mystery of this phenomenon and challenges us to think about this issue differently through learned empathy.

Dan Komar is a senior at Juniata College. He is currently working on his senior thesis about psychopathy. His research is under supervision of Dr. Weldon who is also a speaker at this event.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
09:04

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