Inside the Brains of Psychopaths
Wynne Parry
Live Science
Tue, 22 Nov 2011 16:29 CET
Psycopaths are estimated to make up 1 percent of the population and up to 25 percent of male offenders in federal correctional settings.
Differences in psychopaths' brains may help explain their anti-social behavior,
according to new research.
Psychopaths are identified as highly selfish, and lacking in emotion and
conscience. Experts estimate that about
1 percent of the general population and as many as 25 percent of male
offenders in federal correctional settings are psychopaths. Research looking
into the minds of psychopaths has found not only differences in their brains but
also, at least in one recent study, speech
patterns.
In the new study, which relied on scans of the brains of psychopaths
incarcerated in Wisconsin, the researchers found reduced connections between a
part of the brain associated with empathy and decision-making, known as the
ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), and other parts of the brain.
Using two different types of images, the researchers compared the brains of male
prisoners diagnosed as psychopaths with those of prisoners who did not receive
this diagnosis. Among the psychopathic prisoners, the researchers found weaker
connections between the vmPFC and other parts of the brain, including the
amygdala.
The amygdala itself is associated with emotion, memory and fear. Interactions
between the vmPFC and the amygdala are
believed to underlie aspects of emotion regulation, aggression and stimulus
reinforced associations, the researchers write in an article published in the
most recent issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.
"Those two structures in the brain, which are believed to regulate emotion and
social behavior, seem to not be communicating as they should," said Michael
Koenigs, a study researcher and assistant professor of psychiatry at the
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.
This study builds on previous work in which Koenigs and colleague Joseph Newman,
a psychology professor at University of Wisconsin-Madison, showed that
psychopaths responded to decision-making tests in a manner resembling that of
patients who had suffered damage to their vmPFC.