Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
about
Comorbidities and continuities as ontogenic processes: Toward a developmental spectrum model of externalizing psychopathologyPsychophysiological correlates of aggression and violence: an integrative reviewEstimating facets of psychopathy from normal personality traits: a step toward community epidemiological investigationsThe dominance behavioral system and psychopathology: evidence from self-report, observational, and biological studiesTriarchic conceptualization of psychopathy: developmental origins of disinhibition, boldness, and meannessPsychopathic PersonalityVisual complexity attenuates emotional processing in psychopathy: implications for fear-potentiated startle deficits.Emotional conditions disrupt behavioral control among individuals with dysregulated personality traits.Clarifying the role of defensive reactivity deficits in psychopathy and antisocial personality using startle reflex methodology.Multimethod assessment of psychopathy in relation to factors of internalizing and externalizing from the Personality Assessment Inventory: the impact of method variance and suppressor effects.Clarifying the content coverage of differing psychopathy inventories through reference to the triarchic psychopathy measure.Parallel syndromes: two dimensions of narcissism and the facets of psychopathic personality in criminally involved individuals.Characterizing psychopathy using DSM-5 personality traits.Delineating the construct network of the Personnel Reaction Blank: associations with externalizing tendencies and normal personality.Psychopathic and externalizing offenders display dissociable dysfunctions when responding to facial affect.Both self-report and interview-based measures of psychopathy predict attention abnormalities in criminal offenders.Altering the Cognitive-Affective Dysfunctions of Psychopathic and Externalizing Offender Subtypes with Cognitive Remediation.Factors of psychopathy and electrocortical response to emotional pictures: Further evidence for a two-process theory.Neural responses to others' pain vary with psychopathic traits in healthy adult malesSecondary Psychopathy, but not Primary Psychopathy, is Associated with Risky Decision-Making in Noninstitutionalized Young Adults.Differential effects of psychopathy and antisocial personality disorder symptoms on cognitive and fear processing in female offendersFacets of psychopathy in relation to potentially traumatic events and posttraumatic stress disorder among female prisoners: the mediating role of borderline personality disorder traitsValidity of factors of the Psychopathy Checklist--Revised in female prisoners: discriminant relations with antisocial behavior, substance abuse, and personality.Psychopathy and negative emotionality: analyses of suppressor effects reveal distinct relations with emotional distress, fearfulness, and anger-hostility.Schedule-induced electrodermal responding in children.Testosterone Modulates Altered Prefrontal Control of Emotional Actions in Psychopathic Offenders(1,2,3)Gendered contexts: Psychopathy and drug use in relation to sex work and exchange.Fearless Dominance and reduced feedback-related negativity amplitudes in a time-estimation task - further neuroscientific evidence for dual-process models of psychopathyValidity of the Externalizing Spectrum Inventory in a criminal offender sample: relations with disinhibitory psychopathology, personality, and psychopathic features.Fear extinction, persistent disruptive behavior and psychopathic traits: fMRI in late adolescence.Identifying subtypes of criminal psychopaths: A replication and extension.Psychopathy Subtypes among African American County Jail Inmates.Reduced negative affect response in female psychopathsFear conditioning, persistence of disruptive behavior and psychopathic traits: an fMRI studyFeature-based attention and conflict monitoring in criminal offenders: interactive relations of psychopathy with anxiety and externalizingDeficient fear conditioning in psychopathy as a function of interpersonal and affective disturbancesSelf-reported attentional control differentiates the major factors of psychopathy.The treatment of substance misuse in psychopathic individuals: why heterogeneity matters.Reconciling discrepant findings for P3 brain response in criminal psychopathy through reference to the concept of externalizing pronenessReconceptualizing antisocial deviance in neurobehavioral terms.
P2860
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P2860
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年学术文章
@wuu
2005年学术文章
@zh-cn
2005年学术文章
@zh-hans
2005年学术文章
@zh-my
2005年学术文章
@zh-sg
2005年學術文章
@yue
2005年學術文章
@zh
2005年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@ast
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@en
type
label
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@ast
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@en
prefLabel
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@ast
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@en
P2093
P2860
P1476
Relations between psychopathy facets and externalizing in a criminal offender sample.
@en
P2093
Alan R Lang
Brian M Hicks
Christopher J Patrick
Robert F Krueger
P2860
P304
P356
10.1521/PEDI.2005.19.4.339
P577
2005-08-01T00:00:00Z