A revised portrait of psychopaths
Harvard Gazette - Health News Feb 17, 2017
Study finds that they do feel regret, but it doesnÂt affect their choices.
hen most people hear the word psychopath, they immediately think of a Hannibal Lecter–style serial killer who is cold, calculating, emotionless, willing to do or say anything to get their desire.
And theyÂre not alone. For decades, researchers studying psychopathy have characterized the disorder as a profound inability to process emotions such as empathy, remorse, or regret.
A recent study, though, suggests that psychopaths are not incapable of feeling emotions like regret and disappointment. What they cannot do, it seems, is make accurate predictions about the outcomes of their choices.
The study, co–authored by Joshua Buckholtz, associate professor of psychology at Harvard, and Arielle Baskin–Sommers, assistant professor of psychology and of psychiatry at Yale University, offers a new model of the disorder that could shed important light on the decision–making process of psychopaths.
The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.
ÂThe assumption has always been that they make these bad choices because they canÂt generate negative emotions like fear, or appropriately respond to emotional signals generated by other people but we turned that idea on its head.Â
Using an economic game, Buckholtz and Baskin–Sommers were able to show that while psychopaths have normal, or even enhanced, emotional responses in situations that typically elicit regret, they have trouble extracting information from the environment that would indicate that an action theyÂre about to take will result in the experience of regret.
ÂThere are two components to regret, Buckholtz explained. ÂThere is retrospective regret, which is how we usually think about regret  the emotional experience after you learn you could have received a better outcome if you had made a different choice. But we also use signals from our environment to make predictions about which actions will or wonÂt result in regret. What differentiated psychopaths from other people was their inability to use those prospective regret signals, to use information about the choices they were given to anticipate how much regret they were going to experience, and adjust their decision–making accordingly.
ÂItÂs almost like a blindness to future regret, he added. ÂWhen something happens, they feel regret, but what they canÂt do is look forward and use information that would tell them theyÂre going to feel regret to guide their decision–making.Â
ÂThese findings highlight that psychopathic individuals are not simply incapable of regret or other emotions, but that there is a more nuanced dysfunction that gets in the way of their adaptive functioning, Baskin–Sommers said. ÂBy appreciating this complexity, we are poised to develop more accurate methods for predicting the costly behavior of psychopathic individuals.Â
Using a measure of prospective regret sensitivity, Buckholtz and Baskin–Sommers were also able to predict whether and even how many times study participants had been incarcerated.
ÂContrary to what you would expect based on these basic emotional–deficit models, their emotional responses to regret didnÂt predict incarceration, Buckholtz said. ÂWe know psychopathy is one of the biggest predictors of criminal behavior, but what we found was that behavioral regret sensitivity moderated that, raising the suggestion that intact behavioral regret sensitivity could be a protective factor against incarceration in psychopathic individuals.Â
While the study upends the pop–culture image of psychopaths, Buckholtz is hopeful that it will also provide a new direction for scientists who hope to understand how psychopaths make decisions.
Go to Original
hen most people hear the word psychopath, they immediately think of a Hannibal Lecter–style serial killer who is cold, calculating, emotionless, willing to do or say anything to get their desire.
And theyÂre not alone. For decades, researchers studying psychopathy have characterized the disorder as a profound inability to process emotions such as empathy, remorse, or regret.
A recent study, though, suggests that psychopaths are not incapable of feeling emotions like regret and disappointment. What they cannot do, it seems, is make accurate predictions about the outcomes of their choices.
The study, co–authored by Joshua Buckholtz, associate professor of psychology at Harvard, and Arielle Baskin–Sommers, assistant professor of psychology and of psychiatry at Yale University, offers a new model of the disorder that could shed important light on the decision–making process of psychopaths.
The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.
ÂThe assumption has always been that they make these bad choices because they canÂt generate negative emotions like fear, or appropriately respond to emotional signals generated by other people but we turned that idea on its head.Â
Using an economic game, Buckholtz and Baskin–Sommers were able to show that while psychopaths have normal, or even enhanced, emotional responses in situations that typically elicit regret, they have trouble extracting information from the environment that would indicate that an action theyÂre about to take will result in the experience of regret.
ÂThere are two components to regret, Buckholtz explained. ÂThere is retrospective regret, which is how we usually think about regret  the emotional experience after you learn you could have received a better outcome if you had made a different choice. But we also use signals from our environment to make predictions about which actions will or wonÂt result in regret. What differentiated psychopaths from other people was their inability to use those prospective regret signals, to use information about the choices they were given to anticipate how much regret they were going to experience, and adjust their decision–making accordingly.
ÂItÂs almost like a blindness to future regret, he added. ÂWhen something happens, they feel regret, but what they canÂt do is look forward and use information that would tell them theyÂre going to feel regret to guide their decision–making.Â
ÂThese findings highlight that psychopathic individuals are not simply incapable of regret or other emotions, but that there is a more nuanced dysfunction that gets in the way of their adaptive functioning, Baskin–Sommers said. ÂBy appreciating this complexity, we are poised to develop more accurate methods for predicting the costly behavior of psychopathic individuals.Â
Using a measure of prospective regret sensitivity, Buckholtz and Baskin–Sommers were also able to predict whether and even how many times study participants had been incarcerated.
ÂContrary to what you would expect based on these basic emotional–deficit models, their emotional responses to regret didnÂt predict incarceration, Buckholtz said. ÂWe know psychopathy is one of the biggest predictors of criminal behavior, but what we found was that behavioral regret sensitivity moderated that, raising the suggestion that intact behavioral regret sensitivity could be a protective factor against incarceration in psychopathic individuals.Â
While the study upends the pop–culture image of psychopaths, Buckholtz is hopeful that it will also provide a new direction for scientists who hope to understand how psychopaths make decisions.
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