Attribution of blame for criminal acts and its relationship with psychopathy as measured by the Hare Psychopathic Checklist (PCL-SV).

Article


Batson, A., Gudjonsson, G. and Gray, J. 2010. Attribution of blame for criminal acts and its relationship with psychopathy as measured by the Hare Psychopathic Checklist (PCL-SV). The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. 21 (1), pp. 91-101. https://doi.org/10.1080/14789940903284979
TypeArticle
TitleAttribution of blame for criminal acts and its relationship with psychopathy as measured by the Hare Psychopathic Checklist (PCL-SV).
AuthorsBatson, A., Gudjonsson, G. and Gray, J.
Abstract

The concept of psychopathy describes disordered individuals as lacking in responsibility and feelings of guilt for their actions. The aim of the current study was to investigate the relationship between blame attribution (measured by the Gudjonsson Blame Attribution Inventory- Revised - GBAI-R) and psychopathy (measured by the Hare Psychopathic Checklist-Revised - PCL-SV) among mentally disordered offenders. It was hypothesised that psychopathy would correlate positively with external attribution of blame and negatively with feelings of guilt. Participants were 67 males from six medium secure units in the south east of England. A significant positive correlation was found between psychopathy (Factor 1 and Total score) and external attribution of blame, but not between psychopathy and feelings of guilt. The findings suggest that external attribution of blame is more associated with the interpersonal, affective and attitudinal factors of psychopathy (i.e. social-cognitive processes) than behavioural aspects (i.e. poor behavioural control).

Research GroupForensic Psychology Research group
PublisherTaylor and Francis
JournalThe Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology
ISSN1478-9957
Publication dates
Online22 Jan 2010
Publication process dates
Deposited18 Mar 2010
Accepted24 Aug 2009
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/14789940903284979
LanguageEnglish
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