Study
finds psychopaths have distinct brain structure
By Kate
Kelland | Reuters
From
LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists who scanned the brains of men convicted
of murder, rape and violent assaults have found the strongest evidence yet
that psychopaths have structural abnormalities in their brains.
The
researchers, based at King's College London's Institute of Psychiatry, said the
differences in psychopaths' brains mark them out even from other violent
criminals with anti-social personality disorders (ASPD), and
from healthy non-offenders.
Nigel
Blackwood, who led the study, said the ability to use brain scans to identify
and diagnose this sub-group of violent criminals has important implications for
treatment.
The
study showed that psychopaths , who are characterised by a lack of empathy, had
less grey matter in the areas of the brain important for
understanding other peoples' emotions.
While
cognitive and behavourial treatments may benefit people with anti-social
personality disorders, the same approach may not work for psychopaths with
brain damage, Blackwood said.
"To
get a clear idea of which treatments are working, you've got to clearly define
what people are like going into the treatment programmes," he said in a
telephone interview.
Essi
Viding a professor in the psychology and language sciences department of
University College London, who was not involved in Blackwood's study, said it
provided "weighty new evidence" about the importance of
distinguishing psychopathic from non-psychopathic people rather than grouping
them together.
The
findings also have implications for the justice system, because linking
psychopathy to brain function raises the prospect of arguing a defence of
insanity.
Interest
in what goes on inside the heads of violent criminals has been sharpened by the
trial ofAnders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian who massacred 77 people last
July.
Two
court-appointed psychiatric teams who examined Breivik came to opposite
conclusions about his mental health. The killer himself has railed being called
insane.
LESS
GREY MATTER IN BRAIN'S "SOCIAL" AREAS
Blackwood's
team used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to scan the brains of 44 violent
adult male offenders in Britain who had already been diagnosed with anti-social
personality disorders.
The
crimes they had committed included murder, rape, attempted murder and grievous
bodily harm.
Of the
44 men scanned, 17 met the diagnosis for ASPD plus psychopathy and 27 did not.
The researchers also scanned the brains of 22 healthy non-offenders.
The
results showed that the psychopaths' brains had significantly less grey matter
in the anterior rostral prefrontal cortex and temporal poles than the brains of
the non-psychopathic offenders and non-offenders.
These
areas of the brain are important for understanding other people's emotions and
intentions, and are activated when people think about moral behaviour, the
researchers said.
Damage
to these areas is linked with a lack of empathy, a poor response to fear and
distress and a lack of self-conscious emotions such as guilt or embarrassment.
Lindsay
Thomson, a professor of forensic psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh who
was not involved in this study, said Blackwood's findings add to evidence that
psychopathy is a distinct neurodevelopmental brain disorder.
Research
shows that most violent crimes are committed by a small group of persistent
male offenders with ASPD.
In
England and Wales, for example, around half of male prisoners meet diagnostic
criteria for ASPD. A major review of studies covering 23,000 prisoners from 62
countries conducted in 2002 found that 47 percent had anti-social personality
disorder.
Such
people typically react in an aggressive way to frustration or perceived
threats, but most are not psychopaths, the researchers wrote in a summary of
their study, which was published in the Archives of General Psychiatry journal.
There
are clear behaviour differences among people with ASPD depending on whether
they also have psychopathy. Their patterns of offending are different,
suggesting the need for a separate approach to treatment.
"We
describe those without psychopathy as 'hot-headed' and those with psychopathy
as 'cold-hearted'," Blackwood explained.
"The
'cold-hearted' psychopathic group begin offending earlier, engage in a broader
range and greater density of offending behaviours, and respond less well to
treatment programmes in adulthood compared to the 'hot-headed' group."
(Reporting
by Kate Kelland; Editing by Rosalind Russell)
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