Latent profile analysis of psychopathic traits among homicide, general violent, property, and white-collar offenders
Purpose: The aim of this study was to identify meaningful subtypes of psychopathic traits among prisoners. Another aim was to estimate the association between psychopathy class membership and type of offending (homicide, general violent, property, and white-collar offences).
Methods: A systematically selected representative sample of 1126 adult male prisoners completed a personality-based self-report measure of psychopathy, the Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS).
Results: Latent profile analysis revealed five distinct classes of psychopathic traits: a “high psychopathy group” (7.1%)”, a “moderate psychopathy group” (10.8%), a “high interpersonal manipulation group” (20.8%), a “moderate affective/cognitive responsiveness group” (16.8%), and a “low psychopathy group” (44.6%). Multinominal logistic regression showed that general violent offenders were most likely to belong in the high psychopathy group, whereas property and white-collar criminals were most likely to be the members of the high interpersonal manipulation group.
Conclusions: Findings suggest that most inmates, even those detained in maximum and medium security units, do not meet the diagnostic criteria for psychopathy. The significance of the present findings is discussed in relation to past and future research as well as clinical practice.
History
School
- Social Sciences and Humanities
Department
- Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy
Published in
Journal of Criminal JusticeVolume
51Pages
17 - 23Publisher
ElsevierVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Rights holder
© ElsevierPublisher statement
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Journal of Criminal Justice and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2017.06.001Acceptance date
2017-06-02Publication date
2017-06-07Copyright date
2017ISSN
0047-2352eISSN
1873-6203Publisher version
Language
- en