Abstract
The psychological literature now differentiates between two types of psychopath: successful (with little or no criminal record) and unsuccessful (with a criminal record). Recent research indicates that earlier findings of reduced autonomic activity, reduced prefrontal grey matter, and compromised executive activity may only be true of unsuccessful psychopaths. In contrast, successful psychopaths actually show autonomic and executive function that exceeds that of normals, while having no difference in prefrontal volume from normals. We argue that many successful psychopaths are legally responsible for their actions, as they have the executive capacity to choose not to harm (and thus are legally rational). However, many unsuccessful psychopaths have a lack of executive function that should at least partially excuse them from criminal culpability. Although a successful psychopath's increased executive function may occur in conflict with, rather than in consonance with their increased autonomic activity—producing a cognitive style characterized by selfdeception and articulate-sounding, but unsound reasoning—they may be capable of recognizing and correcting their lack of autonomic data, and thus can be held responsible.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.
References
Murphy, J.G. 1972. Moral death: A kantian essay on psychopathy. Ethics 82: 284.
Fields, L. 1996. Psychopathy, other-regarding moral beliefs, and responsibility. Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 3(4): 261–277.
Morse, S.J. 2008. Psychopathy and criminal responsibility. Neuroethics 1(3): 205–212.
Kiehl, K. and J. Buckholtz. 2010. Inside the mind of a Psychopath, In Scientific American. 22–28.
Hughs, V. 2010. Head Case, In Nature.
Murray, K. and J. Castle, K. Sifferd. 2012: Philadelphia. Interview with the author.
Kennett, J. 2002. Autism, empathy and moral agency. The Philosophical Quarterly 52(208): 340–357.
Osumi, T., et al. 2007. Psychopathic traits and cardiovascular responses to emotional stimuli. Personality and Individual Differences 42(7): 1391–1402.
Hare, R.D., J. Frazelle, and D.N. Cox. 1978. Psychopathy and physiological responses to threat of an aversive stimulus. Psychophysiology 15(2): 165–172.
Yang, Y., et al. 2005. Volume reduction in prefrontal gray matter in unsuccessful criminal psychopaths. Biological Psychiatry 57(10): 1103–1108.
Yang, Y., et al. 2010. Morphological alterations in the prefrontal cortex and amygdala in unsuccessful psychopaths. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 119: 546–554.
Ishikawa, S.S., et al. 2001. Autonomic stress reactivity and executive functions in successful and unsuccessful criminal psychopaths from the community. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 110(3): 423–432.
Paulhus, D.L., and K.M. Williams. 2002. The dark triad of personality: Narcissism, machiavellianism, and psychopathy. Journal of Research in Personality 36(6): 556–563.
Hare, R.D. 1991. Manual for the revised psychopathy checklist, 1st ed. Toronto: Multi-Health System.
Morse, S.J. 2000. Rationality and responsibility. Southern California Law Review 74: 251.
Hart, H. 1968. Punishment and responsibility: Essays in the philosophy of law. Oxford: Clarendon.
Morse, S.J. 1984. Undiminished confusion in diminished capacity. The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 75(1) 1–55.
Morse, S.J. 2003. Inevitable Mens Rea. Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy. 27.
Knobe, J. 2003. Intentional action and side effects in ordinary language. Analysis 63(3): 190–194.
Searle, J.R. 2003. Rationality in Action. A Bradford Book.
Sifferd, K.L. 2006. In defense of the use of commonsense psychology in the criminal law. Law & Philosophy 25: 571–612.
Hirstein, W., and K.L. Sifferd. 2011. The legal self: Executive processes and legal theory. Conciousness and Cognition 20: 156–171.
Moscovitch, and Winocur. 2002. The frontal cortex and working with memory. In Principles of frontal lobe function, ed. D.T. Stuss and R.R. Knight, 188–209. New York: Oxford University Press.
Burgess, P.W. 2000. Real-world multitasking from a cognitive neuroscience perspective. Control of cognitive processes, ed. S.M.a.J. Driver. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Johnson, M.K., Hayes, S.M., D’Esposito, M.D., and Raye, C.L. ed. 2000. Confabulation. Handbook of Neuropsychology, ed. J.G.a.F. Boller., Elsevier: New York.
Owen, A.M., A.C. Evans, and M. Petrides. 1996. Evidence for a two-stage model of spatial working memory processing within the lateral prefrontal cortex. A positron emission tomography study. Cerebral Cortex 6: 31–38.
Duncan, J., and A. Owen. 2000. Common regions of the human frontal lobe recruited by diverse cognitive demands. Trends in Neurosciences 23(10): 475–483.
Hirstein, W. 2005. Brain fiction: self-deception and the riddle of confabulation. MIT Press.
Baddeley, A., and B. Wilson. 1988. Frontal amnesia and the dysexecutive syndrome. Brain and Cognition 7(2): 212–230.
Fischer, J.M. and M. Ravizza. 1999. Responsibility and control: A theory of moral responsibility. Cambridge University Press.
Blair, R., D. Mitchell, and K. Blair. 2005. The Psychopath: Emotion and the Brain. Jon Wiley & Sons.
Roskies, A.L. 2003. Are ethical judgements intrinsically motivational? Lessons from “acquired sociopathy”. Philosophical Psychology 16(1): 51–66.
Kringelbach, M.L. 2005. The human orbitofrontal cortex: Linking reward to hedonic experience. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 6(9): 691–702.
Motzkin, J.C., et al. 2011. Reduced prefrontal connectivity in psychopathy. The Journal of Neuroscience 31(48): 17348–17357.
Roskies, A. 2006. Patients with ventromedial frontal damage have moral beliefs. Philosophical Psychology 19(5): 617–627.
Marsh, A.A., and R.J.R. Blair. 2008. Deficits in facial affect recognition among antisocial populations: A meta-analysis. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 32(3): 454–465.
Birbaumer, N., et al. 2005. Deficient fear conditioning in psychopathy: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Archives of General Psychiatry 62(7): 799–805.
Morgan, A.B., and S. Lilienfeld. 2000. A meta-analytic review of the relation between antisocial behavior and neuropsychological measures of executive function. Clinical Psychology Review 20(1): 113–136.
Newman, J.P., C.M. Patterson, and D.S. Kosson. 1987. Response perveration in psychopaths. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 96: 145–148.
Yang, Y., et al. 2011. Abnormal structural correlates of response perseveration in individuals with psychpathy. Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 23(1): 107–110.
Cleckley, H. 1976. The mask of sanity. St. Louis: Mosby.
Hiatt, K.D., W.A. Schmitt, and J.P. Newman. 2004. Stroop tasks reveal abnormal selective attention among psychopathic offenders. Neuropsychology 18: 50–59.
Newman, J.P. and A.R. Lorenz. 2003. Response modulation and emotion processing: Implications for psychopathy and other dysregulatory psychopathology, In Handbook of Affective Sciences, ed. R.J. Davidson, K. Scherer, and H.H. Goldsmith, 904–929. Oxford University Press.
Zeier, J.D., et al. 2012. Cognitive control deficits associated with antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy. Personality Disorders 3(3): 283–293.
Gao, Y., and A. Raine. 2010. Successful and unsuccessful psychopaths: A neurobiological model. Behavioral Sciences & the Law 28(2): 194–210.
Mullins-Sweatt, S.N., et al. The search for the successful psychopath. Journal of Research in Personality 44(4):554–558.
Dolan, M. and R. Fullam. 2010. Moral/conventional transgression distinction and psychopathy in conduct disordered adolescent offenders. Personality and Individual Differences 49:(995–1000).
Blair, R. 1995. A cognitive developmental approach to morality: Investingating the psychopath. Cognition 57: 1–29.
Levy, N. 2007. The responsibility of the psychopath revisited. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 14(2): 129–138.
Turiel, E. 1983. The development of social knowledge: morality and convention. Cambridge University Press.
Nichols, S. 2002. Norms with feeling: Towards a psychological account of moral judgment. Cognition 84(2): 221–236.
Nichols, S. 2004. Sentimental rules: on the natural foundations of moral judgment. Oxford University Press.
James, R., and R. Blair. 1996. Brief report: Morality in the autistic child. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 26(5): 571–579.
Blair, R. 1999. Psychophysiological responsiveness to the distress of others in children with autism. Personality and Individual Differences 26(3).
Grant, C., et al. 2005. Moral understanding in children with autism. Autism 9(3).
Kelly, D., et al. 2007. Harm, affect, and the moral/conventional distinction. Mind and Language 22(2).
Hirstein, W. et al. 2001. Autonomic responses of austic children to people and objects. Proceedings of the Royal Society London 268: 1883–1888.
Baird, A.A., and J.A. Fugelsang. 2004. The emergence of consequential thought: Evidence from neuroscience. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 359(1451): 1797–1804.
Dressler, J. 1973–1984. Reaffirming the moral legitimacy of the doctrine of diminished capacity: a brief reply to Professor Morse. The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 75(3):953–962.
Rogers, R., W. Seman, and J. Stampley. 1984. A study of socio-demographic characteristics of individuals evaluated for insanity. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 28(1): 3–10.
Warren, J.I., et al. 1991. Criminal offense, psychiatric diagnosis, and psycholegal opinion: An analysis of 894 pretrial referrals. Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online 19(1): 63–69.
Skeem, J., J. Monahan, and E. Mulvey. 2002. Psychopathy, treatment involvement, and subsequent violence among civil psychiatric patients. Law and Human Behavior 26(6): 577–603.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Sifferd, K.L., Hirstein, W. On the Criminal Culpability of Successful and Unsuccessful Psychopaths. Neuroethics 6, 129–140 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12152-012-9172-6
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12152-012-9172-6
Keywords
- Psychopathy
- Criminal responsibility
- Executive function
- Rationality