Psychopathy : a very short introduction / Essi Viding.
Material type:
- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780198802266
- 0198802269
- 616.8582 VID 23 022858
- RC555 .V53 2019
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore | 616.8582 VID 022858 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 022858 |
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616.8527 VAI 014822 Inside a dark box / | 616.85270092 BHA 022288 I've never been (un)happier / | 616.8553 SNO 022857 Dyslexia : a very short introduction / | 616.8582 VID 022858 Psychopathy : a very short introduction / | 616.861 NAT 022316 Relapse prevention in alchohol dependence : a family-based approach : treatment provider's manual / | 616.89 BUR 009267 Psychiatry : | 616.89 DAV 009311 Abnormal psychology; |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Psychopathy is a personality disorder that has long captured the public imagination. Newspaper column inches have been devoted to murderers with psychopathic features, and we also encounter psychopaths in films and books. Individuals with psychopathy are characterised in particular by lack of empathy and guilt, manipulation of other people and, in the case of criminal psychopathy, premeditated violent behaviour. They are dangerous and can incur immeasurable emotional, psychological, physical, and financial costs to their victims and their families. Despite the public fascination with psychopathy, there is often a very limited understanding of the condition, and several myths about psychopathy abound. For example, people commonly assume that all psychopaths are sadistic serial killers or that all violent and antisocial individuals are psychopaths. Yet, research shows that most psychopaths are not serial killers, and, equally, there are plenty of antisocial and violent offenders who are not psychopaths. This Very Short Introduction gives an overview of how we can identify individuals with or at risk of developing psychopathy, and how they differ from other people who display antisocial behavior. Essi Viding also explores the latest genetic, neuroscience, and psychology evidence in order to illuminate why psychopaths behave and develop the way they do, and considers whether it is possible to prevent or even treat psychopathy.--
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