Selective Mapping of Psychopathy and Externalizing to Dissociable Circuits for Inhibitory Self-Control.

Clin Psychol Sci

Department of Psychology, Harvard University; Center for Brain Science, Harvard University; Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital.

Published: May 2016

Antisociality is commonly conceptualized as a unitary construct, but there is considerable evidence for multidimensionality. In particular, two partially dissociable symptom clusters - psychopathy and externalizing - have divergent associations to clinical and forensic outcomes and are linked to unique patterns executive dysfunction. Here, we used fMRI in a sample of incarcerated offenders to map these dimensions of antisocial behavior to brain circuits underlying two aspects of inhibitory self-control: interference suppression and response inhibition. We found that psychopathy and externalizing are characterized by unique and task-selective patterns of dysfunction. While higher levels of psychopathy predicted increased activity within a distributed fronto-parietal network for interference suppression, externalizing did not predict brain activity during attentional control. By contrast, each dimension had opposite associations to fronto-parietal activity during response inhibition. These findings provide neurobiological evidence supporting the fractionation of antisocial behavior, and identify dissociable mechanisms through which different facets predispose dysfunction and impairment.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4955633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2167702616631495DOI Listing

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