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Author Topic: Psychopath's brains wired to seek rewards, no matter the consequences  (Read 924 times)

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Offline CZBZ

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The brains of psychopaths appear to be wired to keep seeking a reward at any cost, new research from Vanderbilt University finds. The research uncovers the role of the brain's reward system in psychopathy and opens a new area of study for understanding what drives these individuals.

The results were published March 14, 2010, in Nature Neuroscience.

"Psychopaths are often thought of as cold-blooded criminals who take what they want without thinking about consequences," Joshua Buckholtz, a graduate student in the Department of Psychology and lead author of the new study, said. "We found that a hyper-reactive dopamine reward system may be the foundation for some of the most problematic behaviors associated with psychopathy, such as violent crime, recidivism and substance abuse."

Previous research on psychopathy has focused on what these individuals lack—fear, empathy and interpersonal skills. The new research, however, examines what they have in abundance—impulsivity, heightened attraction to rewards and risk taking. Importantly, it is these latter traits that are most closely linked with the violent and criminal aspects of psychopathy.

"There has been a long tradition of research on psychopathy that has focused on the lack of sensitivity to punishment and a lack of fear, but those traits are not particularly good predictors of violence or criminal behavior," David Zald, associate professor of psychology and of psychiatry and co-author of the study, said. "Our data is suggesting that something might be happening on the other side of things. These individuals appear to have such a strong draw to reward—to the carrot—that it overwhelms the sense of risk or concern about the stick."

To examine the relationship between dopamine and psychopathy, the researchers used positron emission tomography, or PET, imaging of the brain to measure dopamine release, in concert with a functional magnetic imaging, or fMRI, probe of the brain's reward system.

"The really striking thing is with these two very different techniques we saw a very similar pattern—both were heightened in individuals with psychopathic traits," Zald said.

Study volunteers were given a personality test to determine their level of psychopathic traits. These traits exist on a spectrum, with violent criminals falling at the extreme end of the spectrum. However, a normally functioning person can also have the traits, which include manipulativeness, egocentricity, aggression and risk taking.

In the first portion of the experiment, the researchers gave the volunteers a dose of amphetamine, or speed, and then scanned their brains using PET to view dopamine release in response to the stimulant. Substance abuse has been shown in the past to be associated with alterations in dopamine responses. Psychopathy is strongly associated with substance abuse.

"Our hypothesis was that psychopathic traits are also linked to dysfunction in dopamine reward circuitry," Buckholtz said. "Consistent with what we thought, we found people with high levels of psychopathic traits had almost four times the amount of dopamine released in response to amphetamine."

In the second portion of the experiment, the research subjects were told they would receive a monetary reward for completing a simple task. Their brains were scanned with fMRI while they were performing the task. The researchers found in those individuals with elevated psychopathic traits the dopamine reward area of the brain, the nucleus accumbens, was much more active while they were anticipating the monetary reward than in the other volunteers.

"It may be that because of these exaggerated dopamine responses, once they focus on the chance to get a reward, psychopaths are unable to alter their attention until they get what they're after," Buckholtz said. Added Zald, "It's not just that they don't appreciate the potential threat, but that the anticipation or motivation for reward overwhelms those concerns."



The National Institute on Drug Abuse funded the research.

Zald is an investigator in the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development.

For more Vanderbilt news visit VUCast, www.vanderbilt.edu/news .

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Offline NewWings4MeNow

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Given XNH's history of having started using drugs as a teen, with his parents in their home, growing pot/selling it at school, he clearly wanted the high and financial reward in spite of the legal risk.  I never asked XNH if he'd ever been arrested and nobody in his family ever commented.  When I ran a background check on him after our split, it showed no arrests but only went back a certain number of years.

There are a LOT of comments in this article that speak to me directly. 

Since XNH said he'd done every drug except heroin, I assume that includes speed and other accelerators, and that I saw him affected by these during one of our confrontations since his behavior was so wildly and unusually physically aggressive.  (I've also had to wonder how much of his time he'd spent avoiding legal punishment while so stoned through the years.)  His objective at that time was to get into our house at the return of d's visitation, to which he had no right by agreement.  He drove away with no reward, but having made plenty of threats.  And it was just a week or so after that that I returned to our home approaching the driveway in midday, to find him running from the front door, jumping into his car and speeding out of the driveway in his car before I pulled in.  Clearly his objective then had been to take things from the house.

Over the long pull XNH's objective was to get full custody of d, and he used every unimaginably immoral and illegal method to try to achieve it, with zero fear, zero empathy toward me or toward any law enforcement person.

Post-D XNH's objective was to pay as little as possible and to punish me financially, so he stole, forged and tried to commit fraud to achieve getting/keeping the most $ possible.  I knew things were WAY, WAY over the edge when d was in 3rd grade, her class had an auction of the kids' art for parents, and XNH bid on d's painting only to insist that I pay half of the $15 or 20.

There were no brain scans, fMRIs or any other tests of that kind done on XNH during the separation and D, so I have no idea what his brain looks like -- but I can just imagine.  Given that the psych evaluator asked me to keep notes pending custody change, I know in my guts that he saw some things in XNH's behavior that I've been living all this time.

Shortly before our split the head security guard at our community gate, a guy who'd been a career police officer, said he'd watched XNH running the mountain and he noticed that the man looked pained and that he seemed to be tormented by something and was trying to run away from something.

Shortly before our split I noticed a huge change in XNH's conversation toward me in that virtually EVERYthing he did he wanted some kind of reward, or quid-pro-quo, for:  If he cleaned I had to clean; if he did ANYthing for me I had to do something for him in return.  This represented a complete 180 shift in the balance of our relationship through the years, and included words and attitude conveying a selfishness that he'd NEVER used toward me before.  This was one of many aspects of his emerging persona that I knew was not at all for me.

N?  P?  I think both.

NewWings4MeNow
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Offline Retired Cornfield

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Re: Psychopath's brains wired to seek rewards, no matter the consequences
« Reply #2 on: April 13, 2011, 08:17:51 PM »
I have understood for a very long time the idea of a win at all costs, but now I am thinking about Husband's desire for a reward at any cost, and the idea fits with his history.

He was put in a closet as a youngster and told to be quiet and he would get a reward.  The purpose was for his mother to hide his existence while she partied with college age friends.  She nabbed a college frat guy in a convertible for her second husband. 

When his grandmother found him and took him home, she rewarded him, so he stayed and grew up in her home.
I remember her buying him gallon jars of Marichino cherries so he could eat them by the handfull.  When I mentioned health concerns, he laughed at me.  She brought huge Hershey bars to our toddler sons at 5:00 p.m. when she visited and expected them to be allowed to snack on them before dinner.  I said "no" and put them on top of the fridge for after dinner.  Great-grandmother was stunned at our discipline.
I baked two or three times a week when we were first married, and he pouted if there were no fresh baked biscuits for his strawberries, topped off with milk and whipped cream.   He sulked if he had to eat plain strawberries. 
Rewards for everyday living.  Yes, that makes sense to me.  When I stopped, he turned very nasty.
Retired Cornfield
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