학술논문

Examining the relationships between sub-clinical psychopathic traits with shame, guilt and externalisation response tendencies to everyday transgressions.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. Aug2016, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p569-585. 17p. 2 Charts.
Subject
*PATHOLOGICAL psychology
*SHAME
*GUILT (Psychology)
*EXTERNALIZING behavior
*EMOTIONS
Language
ISSN
1478-9949
Abstract
Although many theories of psychopathy include reference to some form of emotional deficit, surprisingly little research has examined the relationships between psychopathic traits and important self-conscious moral emotions such as shame and guilt. The present study sought to examine these relationships in a sub-clinical sample, taking into account the important theoretical differences between the two emotions. Participants (N = 739) completed a measure of psychopathic traits and a measure of self-conscious affect style. Both primary and secondary psychopathic traits were found to be inversely related to guilt-proneness; however, the effect size was greater for primary psychopathic traits. Primary psychopathic traits were unrelated to shame-proneness, while secondary psychopathic traits were positively related to shame-proneness. Both primary and secondary traits were positively related to externalisation; however the effect size was greater for primary over secondary traits. The findings provide support for affective differences between psychopathy variants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]