Author:
Fenton G. W.,Fenwick P. B. C.,Ferguson W.,Lam C. T.
Abstract
Using a classical click/flash paradigm, the CNV was recorded from the following three groups of subjects at Broadmoor Hospital: (1) 14 ‘psychopathic’ patients selected by use of the 4/9 MMPI profile and confirmed by independent clinical diagnosis; (2) 15 ‘non psychopathic’ patients, all psychotic and mainly schizophrenic; (3) 14 healthy staff control subjects. All three groups were matched for age and sex; the two patients groups were also matched for length of stay. Two series of 32 paired stimuli were used, separated by an interval of 30 minutes. The mean CNV voltage was significantly lower in the ‘non-psychopathic’ patients. The amplitude of the ‘psychopath's' CNV response did not differ significantly from that of the staff controls, but the response variability between the first and second series of trials was much greater in the ‘psychopathic’ patients than in the other two subject groups. The ‘psychopathic’ subjects tended to show more rapid initial development of the CNV.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference13 articles.
1. Psychophysiology of sociopathy: Electrocortical measures
2. Blackburn R. (1974) Personality and the Classification of Psychopathic Disorders. Special Hospitals Research Reports, Number 10.
3. McCallum W. C. (1973) The CNV and conditionability in psychopaths. In Event-related Slow Potentials of the Brain: Their Relations to Behaviour (eds McCallum W. C. and Knott J. R. ). Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology Supplement 33, pp 337–43.
4. Contingent negative variation (CNV) and psychological processes in man.
Cited by
15 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献