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A Latent Class Analysis of Psychopathic Traits in Civil Psychiatric Patients: The Role of Criminal Behaviour, Violence, and Gender
Author(s) -
DHINGRA KATIE,
BODUSZEK DANIEL,
KOLAPALMER SUSANNA
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the howard journal of criminal justice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1468-2311
pISSN - 0265-5527
DOI - 10.1111/hojo.12128
Subject(s) - psychopathy , latent class model , psychology , multinomial logistic regression , normative , antisocial personality disorder , developmental psychology , logistic regression , class (philosophy) , social class , clinical psychology , poison control , injury prevention , social psychology , personality , medicine , statistics , political science , mathematics , artificial intelligence , environmental health , computer science , law
This study aimed to determine whether distinct subgroups of psychopathic traits exist in a sample of civil psychiatric patients, using data from the MacArthur Violence Risk Assessment Project (n = 810), by means of latent class analysis. Multinomial logistic regression was used to interpret the nature of the latent classes, or groups, by estimating the associations with criminal behaviour, violence, and gender. The best fitting latent class model was a 4‐class solution: a ‘high psychopathy class’ (class 1; 26.4%), an ‘intermediate psychopathy class’ (class 2; 16.0%), a ‘low affective‐interpersonal and high antisocial‐lifestyle psychopathy class’ (class 3; 31.3%), and a ‘normative class’ (class 4; 26.3%). Each of the latent classes was predicted by differing external variables. Psychopathy is not a dichotomous entity, rather it falls along a skewed continuum that is best explained by four homogenous groups that are differentially related to gender, and criminal and violent behaviour.

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