Communicating the Neuroscience of Psychopathy and Its Influence on Moral Behavior : Protocol of Two Experimental Studies

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Blakey , R , Askelund , A D , Boccanera , M , Immonen , J , Plohl , N , Popham , C , Sorger , C & Stuhlreyer , J 2017 , ' Communicating the Neuroscience of Psychopathy and Its Influence on Moral Behavior : Protocol of Two Experimental Studies ' , Frontiers in Psychology , vol. 8 , 294 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00294

Title: Communicating the Neuroscience of Psychopathy and Its Influence on Moral Behavior : Protocol of Two Experimental Studies
Author: Blakey, Robert; Askelund, Adrian D.; Boccanera, Matilde; Immonen, Johanna; Plohl, Nejc; Popham, Cassandra; Sorger, Clarissa; Stuhlreyer, Julia
Contributor organization: Faculty of Medicine
University of Helsinki
Department of Psychology and Logopedics
Medicum
Date: 2017-03-14
Language: eng
Number of pages: 17
Belongs to series: Frontiers in Psychology
ISSN: 1664-1078
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00294
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/299261
Abstract: Neuroscience has identified brain structures and functions that correlate with psychopathic tendencies. Since psychopathic traits can be traced back to physical neural attributes, it has been argued that psychopaths are not truly responsible for their actions and therefore should not be blamed for their psychopathic behaviors. This experimental research aims to evaluate what effect communicating this theory of psychopathy has on the moral behavior of lay people. If psychopathy is blamed on the brain, people may feel less morally responsible for their own psychopathic tendencies and therefore may be more likely to display those tendencies. An online study will provide participants with false feedback about their psychopathic traits supposedly based on their digital footprint (i.e., Facebook likes), thus classifying them as having either above-average or below-average psychopathic traits and describing psychopathy in cognitive or neurobiological terms. This particular study will assess the extent to which lay people are influenced by feedback regarding their psychopathic traits, and how this might affect their moral behavior in online tasks. Public recognition of these potential negative consequences of neuroscience communication will also be assessed. A field study using the lost letter technique will be conducted to examine lay people's endorsement of neurobiological, as compared to cognitive, explanations of criminal behavior. This field and online experimental research could inform the future communication of neuroscience to the public in a way that is sensitive to the potential negative consequences of communicating such science. In particular, this research may have implications for the future means by which neurobiological predictors of offending can be safely communicated to offenders.
Subject: psychopathy
belief in free will
utilitarian moral judgment
neuroscience communication
dishonesty
attributions
belief in determinism
self-control
LOST-LETTER TECHNIQUE
FREE WILL
UTILITARIAN RESPONSES
PERSONALITY-TRAITS
MENTAL-ILLNESS
DARK TRIAD
E-MAIL
JUDGMENT
RESPONSIBILITY
EXPLANATIONS
515 Psychology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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