Author:
Schug Robert A.,Raine Adrian,Wilcox Rand R.
Abstract
BackgroundFew studies have examined people with comorbid schizophrenia-spectrum personality disorder and antisocial personality disorder, a subgroup who may differ psychophysiologically and behaviourally from those with either condition alone.AimsTo test whether individuals with both types of personality disorder are particularly characterised by reduced orienting and arousal and by increased criminal offending.MethodIn a community adult sample, self-reported crime and skin conductance orienting were collected on four diagnostic groups: schizophrenia-spectrum personality disorder only; antisocial personality disorder only; comorbidity of the two disorders; and a control group.ResultsThe comorbid group showed significantly higher levels of criminal behaviour than the other three groups. They also showed reduced skin conductance orienting to neutral tones compared with the other groups, and significantly reduced arousal and orienting to significant stimuli compared with the control group.ConclusionsReduced orienting may reflect a neurocognitive attentional risk factor for both antisocial and schizotypal personality disorders that indirectly reflects a common neural substrate to these disorders.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
25 articles.
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