Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
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Factor Structure and Construct Validity of the Parent-Reported Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits Among High-Risk 9-Year-OldsVentral striatum and amygdala activity as convergence sites for early adversity and conduct disorderCallous-unemotional traits and anxiety in a community sample of 7-year-olds.Environmental risk, Oxytocin Receptor Gene (OXTR) methylation and youth callous-unemotional traits: a 13-year longitudinal study.Psychopathic and externalizing offenders display dissociable dysfunctions when responding to facial affect.Relations of Distinct Psychopathic Personality Traits with Anxiety and Fear: Findings from Offenders and Non-Offenders.Beyond physiological hypoarousal: the role of life stress and callous-unemotional traits in incarcerated adolescent males.What can we learn about emotion by studying psychopathy?Empathic responsiveness in amygdala and anterior cingulate cortex in youths with psychopathic traits.Distinguishing primary and secondary variants of callous-unemotional traits among adolescents in a clinic-referred sample.Interpersonal callousness and co-occurring anxiety: Developmental validity of an adolescent taxonomy.Antisocial behavior, psychopathic features and abnormalities in reward and punishment processing in youth.The cognitive and neural correlates of psychopathy and especially callous-unemotional traits in youths: a systematic review of the evidence.Evaluating Callous-Unemotional Traits as a Personality Construct.Research Review: What do we know about psychopathic traits in children?Are impairments in emotion recognition a core feature of callous-unemotional traits? Testing the primary versus secondary variants model in children.Callous-unemotional, impulsive-irresponsible, and grandiose-manipulative traits: Distinct associations with heart rate, skin conductance, and startle responses to violent and erotic scenes.Clarifying the link between childhood abuse history and psychopathic traits in adult criminal offendersNeuroendocrine factors distinguish juvenile psychopathy variants.Examining Predictors of Callous Unemotional Traits Trajectories Across Adolescence Among High-Risk Males.Psychopathic Traits in Early Childhood: Further Validation of the Child Problematic Traits Inventory.Early Callous-Unemotional Behavior, Theory-of-Mind, and a Fearful/Inhibited Temperament Predict Externalizing Problems in Middle and Late Childhood.Exploring Primary and Secondary Variants of Psychopathy in Adolescents in Detention and in the Community.A New Measure to Assess Psychopathic Personality in Children: The Child Problematic Traits Inventory.Structural coherence and temporal stability of psychopathic personality features during emerging adulthood.Variants of girls and boys with conduct disorder: anxiety symptoms and callous-unemotional traits.Attentional Orientation Patterns toward Emotional Faces and Temperamental Correlates of Preschool Oppositional Defiant Problems: The Moderating Role of Callous-Unemotional Traits and Anxiety Symptoms.The Reliability and Validity of the Inventory of Callous Unemotional Traits: A Meta-Analytic Review.Characterising youth with callous-unemotional traits and concurrent anxiety: evidence for a high-risk clinical group.The Moderating Role of Anxiety in the Associations of Callous-Unemotional Traits with Self-Report and Laboratory Measures of Affective and Cognitive Empathy.Psychopathic traits are associated with reduced fixations to the eye region of fearful faces.Hostile Attribution Bias as a Mediator of the Relationships of Psychopathy and Narcissism With Aggression.Affective Differences Between Psychopathy Variants and Genders in Adjudicated Youth.Psychopathy and Low Anxiety: Meta-Analytic Evidence for the Absence of Inhibition, Not Affect.Investigating the construct of trauma-related acquired callousness among delinquent youth: differences in emotion processing.Maltreatment profiles among incarcerated boys with callous-unemotional traits.Recognition of pain as another deficit in young males with high callous-unemotional traits.Understanding the development of psychopathy: progress and challenges.Dual-axis hormonal covariation in adolescence and the moderating influence of prior trauma and aversive maternal parenting.Two Subtypes of Psychopathic Criminals Differ in Negative Affect and History of Childhood Abuse.
P2860
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P2860
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
description
2012 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2012年の論文
@ja
2012年学术文章
@wuu
2012年学术文章
@zh
2012年学术文章
@zh-cn
2012年学术文章
@zh-hans
2012年学术文章
@zh-my
2012年学术文章
@zh-sg
2012年學術文章
@yue
2012年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@en
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@nl
type
label
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@en
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@nl
prefLabel
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@en
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@nl
P2860
P50
P1476
Primary and secondary variants of juvenile psychopathy differ in emotional processing.
@en
P2093
Elizabeth Cauffman
Jennifer Skeem
P2860
P304
P356
10.1017/S0954579412000557
P577
2012-08-01T00:00:00Z