Why do some children develop serious and persistent anti-social behaviour?

Similar documents
Psychopathic traits in children: Potential for early interventions. Essi Viding Developmental Risk and Resilience Unit, UCL

Talk 2. Neurocognitive differences in children with or without CU- traits 05/12/2013. Psychological. Behavioural

Antisocial behaviour in children with and without callous-unemotional traits

Neuro-cognitive systems underpinning antisocial behavior and the impact of maltreatment and substance abuse on their development

Evidence for substantial genetic risk for psychopathy in 7-year-olds

Cognition to genes via the brain in the study of conduct disorder

CLINICAL ASSESSMENT OF

Childhood maltreatment, latent vulnerability and the shift to preventative help:

Psychological Factors

LEADERSHIP A WALK ON THE DARK SIDE

Psychopathy. Phil408P

Violence by Youth in Norway. Recent Cases

Understanding the Development of Psychopathy: Progress and Challenges. Viding, E. 1* & McCrory, E. 1

How does adversity in childhood get under the skin

Audio will stream through your computer speakers at 2:00 PM ET. Exploring the Impact of Suicide Prevention Research in the Criminal Justice System

Predicting Antisocial Behavior: How Callous- Unemotional Traits Moderate Common Risk Factors

Copyright: DOI link to article: Date deposited: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

The Mind of a Psychopath Mary ET Boyle, Ph.D. Department of Cognitive Science UCSD

Maltreatment, brain development and the law: Towards an informed developmental framework

Callous unemotional traits as a cross-disorders construct

Countertransference with the psychopathic patient

Disruptive behaviours at school: Information processing differentiators of callous-unemotional traits, conduct problems and ADHD

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 55:6 (2014), pp

COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE THEORY OF MIND IN CHILDREN WITH CALLOUS-UNEMOTIONAL TRAITS. Emma Satlof-Bedrick. B.A. in Psychology, Emory University, 2011

Personality Disorder in Primary Care. Dr Graham Ingram Consultant Psychiatrist

Genetic and environmental aetiology of the dimensions of Callous-Unemotional traits

Emotion and Morality (Pt.II)

Research Review: The importance of callousunemotional. aggressive and antisocial behavior

Developmental Pathways to Conduct Disorder: Implications for Future Directions in Research, Assessment, and Treatment

The Biology of Relationships: What Behavioral Genetics Tells Us about Interactions among Family Members

Behavioral genetics: The study of differences

EMOTION COACHING BUILDING EMOTIONAL RESILIENCE

Explosive Youth: Common Brain Disorders. Juvenile Law Conference 2005 Larry Fisher, Ph.D. UHS Neurobehavioral Systems

The Mind of a Psychopath Mary ET Boyle, Ph.D. Department of Cognitive Science UCSD

Usage of any items from the University of Cumbria s institutional repository Insight must conform to the following fair usage guidelines.

Understanding the "Criminal Mind" Why it looks so easy on TV, and Why TV so often gets it wrong

Australian children of alcoholic female twins

A Content Analysis of 9 Case Studies

Leader or Psychopath? A Short Guide to Recognizing Corporate Predators

Late childhood interpersonal callousness and conduct problem trajectories interact to predict adult psychopathy

Differential Styles of Emotional Reactivity and Antisocial Behavior Relative to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Expression in Detained Youth

Seventy years since Kanner s account, what do we think causes autism in 2013?

Changes to Conduct Disorder from DSM-IV-TR to DSM-5

16 Overview! 16 Mental disorder! Psychological disorders! Dilemmas of definition! Your turn!

The Aboriginal Mental Health & Wellbeing Workforce Forum 2017 HOW CAN WE REDUCE THE RATES OF SUICIDE IN THE ABORIGINAL COMMUMITIES?

Associations Between Conduct Disorder, Neurodevelopmental Problems and Psychopathic Personality Traits in a Swedish Twin Youth Population

and Conduct Disorder Master s Thesis Presented to

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY NATURE VS. NURTURE

The Resilient Revolution takes on

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL EXCELLENCE SCOPE

Evolutionary Medicine (continued)

Different types of dangerousness autistic traits vs psychopathic traits

psychopathy and women

Antisocial Personality Disorder

Supplementary Online Content

Can Callous-Unemotional Traits be Reliably Measured in Preschoolers?

Personality disorders. Personality disorder defined: Characteristic areas of impairment: The contributions of Theodore Millon Ph.D.

An introspective analysis of the etiological relationships of psychopathy in serial killers and successful business men

Chapter 6 Genetics. Total Assessment Guide (T.A.G.) 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61 22, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34

Repressive Coping and Pain: Shifts in Attention from Distress toward Physical Pain May Partly Explain Conversion

Roberto C. Guerra 1809 Grayland St Apartment 4, Blacksburg, VA, (786)

Personality Disorders

Johanna Feilhauer. Same but different. Functional correlates of different psychopathy dimensions in (antisocial) youth

Understanding Narcissistic Personality: A Brief Introduction NEA-BPD Call-In January 13, 2109

UNDERSTANDING AND INFLUENCING PUPILS CHOICES AS THEY PREPARE TO LEAVE SCHOOL EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Dr Kathryn Asbury. University of York

We are IntechOpen, the world s leading publisher of Open Access books Built by scientists, for scientists. International authors and editors

09/03/2011 NEUROHORMONES AND AGGRESSION. Concordance on agressiveness between twins ANDROGENIC STEROIDS AND AGGRESSION BUT!

UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations

CHAPTER 9. Biological Foundations of Personality. The Biological Tradition. Temperament

The Needs of Young People who have lost a Sibling or Parent to Cancer.

understanding ATTACHMENT Torben Bergland, MD Associate Director General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists Health Ministries Department

Personality Disorders. Mark Kimsey, M.D. March 8, 2014

Human Behavior Mr. Minervini Ch 15: Abnormal Psychology/Psychopathology Diagnosis for Richard Kuklinski a.k.a. The Iceman

What s it all about?

ADHD and social skills M. T. LAX-PERICALL CONSULTANT IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY PRIORY HOSPITAL ROEHAMPTON

Personality disorder and risk to others

Personality development in juvenile delinquents. Klaus Schmeck

Learning to talk the talk : the relationship of psychopathic traits to deficits in empathy across childhood

AP PSYCH Unit 12.3 Schizophrenia & Personality Disorders

Mentalizing and antisocial personality disorder: a treatment paradox. Prof Anthony W Bateman Geneva 2016

A Developmental Perspective on the Role of Genes on Substance Use Disorder. Elisa M. Trucco, Ph.D., Florida International University

Overstepping Our Bounds: A Critical Examination of Youth Psychopathy

Disruptive behaviour disorders Oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) / Conduct disorder (CD)

Summary. Background. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction

Inside the Criminal Mind

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3 Similar observations in all subsets of the disorder. Personality Disorders. General Symptoms. Chapter 9

Role of Callous-Unemotional Traits in prediction of Childhood behavior problems

Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits References

Development. summary. Sam Sample. Emotional Intelligence Profile. Wednesday 5 April 2017 General Working Population (sample size 1634) Sam Sample

Running head: SOCIAL PHOBIA: A REVIEW 1

Neurotic and Personality Disorders

Personality Disorders Explained

The Three-Factor Theory of Personality. David Center. There has been a plethora of theories of personality and measures of

IMPLICATIONS OF GENE- ENVIRONMENT INTERPLAY FOR APPROACHES TO SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND COMORBIDITY

Personality and its disorders

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Conduct disorder biological treatments

Dr Sarah Cassidy Atypical Development Theme Lead. Suicide Risk in Autism

Genetics of Disordered Gambling

Violence and Mental Illness Resources Wednesday, August 16, :30 PM 5:00 PM

PSY337 Psychopathology Notes

Transcription:

Why do some children develop serious and persistent anti-social behaviour? Prof Essi Viding Professor of Developmental Psychopathology, UCL @EssiViding www.drru-research.org

Ted Bundy (1946-1989) Serial killer Ted Bundy s description of himself: "..the most cold-hearted son of a bitch you'll ever meet. Ted Bundy s defense lawyer s decription of him: "Ted, was the very definition of heartless evil.

What characterises individuals with psychopathy? Lack of remorse / guilt Shallow affect (genuine emotion is short-lived and egocentric) Superficial charm Grandiose sense of self-worth Pathological lying Manipulation of others

?

Psychological Environment Behavioural

Psychological Environment Behavioural

Early behavioural warning signs of children at risk for psychopathy: Lack of remorse and guilt Lack of empathy Shallow affect Manipulation of others for own gain Sense of being more important than others Callous-Unemotional CU traits These traits are predictive of persistent, violent and severe antisocial behaviour/psychopathy in adolescence and adulthood Frick et al., 1994; 2014

Children with conduct problems Low Callous-Unemotional Traits Often aggress when feel under threat Feel bad about hurting others Can have high levels of anxiety High Callous-Unemotional Traits Engage in proactive aggression Lack guilt Do not worry about hurting others Often have low levels of anxiety Frick & Viding, 2009

Psychological Environment Behavioural

Affective processing in children with conduct problems and HIGH callous-unemotional traits Lack of recognition and reactions to other people s emotions Report feeling less fear themselves Less responsive to punishment

Affective processing in children with conduct problems and LOW callous-unemotional traits Hostile Attribution Bias Oversensitive to perceived anger (sometimes even when stimuli are neutral)

Psychological Environment Behavioural

Masked Fear Task Fear Condition Target Backward Mask Target Calm Condition Backward Mask vs. 17ms 183ms 300ms ISI 17ms 183ms 300ms ISI

Contrast estimates Fear>Calm The higher the level of callous-unemotional traits, the less active the amygdala is to fearful faces 4 3 2 0.3 1 0 0.2 0.1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70-0.1-0.2-0.3-0.4-0.5 ICU Score Viding, Sebastian, Dadds, Lockwood, Cecil, de Brito, & McCrory, AJP

and to scenarios showing other people in distress.

and to scenarios showing other people in distress. 5 4 3 2 1 0 Sebastian, McCrory, Cecil, Lockwood, De Brito, Fontaine & Viding (2012), JAMA Psychiatry

Shallow affect Lack of empathy Psychological Environment Behavioural

Psychological Environment Behavioural

Probing the aetiology: Classical twin design Identical Monozygotic Nonidentical Dizygotic

Twin method Genetic influence (A) = identical twins > non- identical twins 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MZ DZ MZ DZ

Twin method Shared environmental influences (C)= Non-identical twins more similar than expected by genetic relatedness 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 Environmental influences that make 10 family members similar to each other 0 MZ DZ MZ DZ

Twin method Non-shared environmental influences (E) = Identical twins not 100% identical Environmental influences that make family members different from each other 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 MZ DZ MZ DZ

Is there a difference in the origin conduct problems between those who have HIGH vs. LOW callous-unemotional traits? Conduct Problems HIGH callous-unemotional traits LOW callous-unemotional traits Genetic Shared E Non-shared E Genetic Shared E Non-shared E Viding, Blair, Moffitt, & Plomin, 2005, JCPP

What genes? What environments?

Risk genes may be different for children with HIGH vs. LOW callous-unemotional traits (Buckholtz & Meyer-Lindenberg, 2009; Viding & Jones, 2008) Conduct Problems HIGH callous-unemotional traits LOW callous-unemotional traits Genotypes conferring low emotional reactivity/arousal? Genotypes conferring high arousal and reactive aggression?

Risk environments may be different for children with HIGH vs. LOW callous-unemotional traits Conduct Problems HIGH callous-unemotional traits LOW callous-unemotional traits? Harsh and inconsistent parenting Maltreatment

Parental warmth protective against development of CP/HCU? (Viding & McCrory, 2015; Vagos, Ribeiro da Silva, Rijo, Brazao, 2016) Parenting and child focused interventions can have a positive effect for children with CP/HCU (Waller, Gardner, & Hyde; 2013; Wilkins, Waller, & Viding, 2016)

Adoption study (Hyde et al., 2016): Biological parents with severe antisocial behaviour were more likely to have adopted away offspring with high CU traits In line with the notion of genetic predisposition Warm adoptive parenting REDUCED risk for developing CU traits in children who have biological risk In line with the notion that genes are not destiny! Encouraging but adoptive families are a case of what can be, not a case of what is

CP/HCU may need: A longer treatment period More comprehensive support Treatment adjuncts suited to their neurocognitive profile

Why do some people become psychopaths?

Why do some people become psychopaths? Genetic vulnerability Environmental conditions that do not counteract the genetic risk or make it worse? Lack of emotional reactivity and empathy; insensitivity to punishment Psychological Environment Behavioural

We also know that not all children with conduct problems and HIGH callous-unemotional traits grow up to be adults with psychopathy We need longitudinal studies that combine different methodologies How does atypical emotionality develop over time? Can these children empathise under any circumstances? Can we help them see the world differently? Specific interventions are being developed

Acknowledgements TEDS, schools, families and children Developmental Risk & Resilience Unit Eamon McCrory, Lucy Foulkes, Philip Kelly, Rachael Lickley, Patricia Lockwood, Elizabeth O Nions, Jean-Baptiste Pingault, Vanessa Puetz, Sophie Raeder, Ruth Roberts, Ana Seara-Cardoso Former lab members Catherine Sebastian, Stephane de Brito, Marine Buon, Caroline Bradley, Laura Finlayson, Charlotte Cecil, Elena Rusconi, Chloe Thompson-Booth, Alice Jones, Nathalie Fontaine, Henrik Larsson, Sara Hodsoll, Zoe Hyde, Moran Cohn, Amy Palmer, Sophie Samuel Collaborators Robert Plomin,Geoff Bird, Jon Roiser, Francesca Happe, Fruhling Rijsdijk, Andrea Mechelli, Mark Dadds, Craig Neumann, Beata Tick Funding ESRC, MRC, British Academy, Royal Society, Waterloo

www.drru-research.org