Psychological - Eysenck personality

    Cards (10)

    • Extraversion
      Positive, Outgoing, needing external stimulation
      Biological basis - under-aroused nervous system
      Leads to risk taking
    • Neuroticism
      Depressed and anxious
      Biological basis - Volatile nervous system
      Leads to unpredictability
    • Psychoticism
      Aggression and Unpredictability
      Biological basis - High testosterone
      Leads to aggression and lack of empathy
    • EPI/EPQ
      The measurement of criminality
    • Socialisation
      Socialisation impacts development - building of attachments in early childhood and seeing, speaking and considering others
      • Criminals did not learn to consider others and delay gratification
      • So both nature and nurture are important
      • Those high in extraversion and neuroticism had nervous systems that were harder to condition
    • Evidence supporting the criminal personality theory
      Eysenck and Eysenck (1970) - Strength
      Compared 2070 male and prisoners’ scores on the EPI with 2422 male controls
      Groups were subdivided into age groups, ranging from 16-69
      On measure of Psychoticism, Extraversion, and Neuroticism prisoners recorded higher scores than controls which accords with predictions of the theory
    • Evidence supporting the criminal personality theory
      Farrington et al (1982)
      Reviewed several studies and reported that offenders tended to score higher on Psychoticism measures but not for Extraversion and Neuroticism
      There is also very little evidence of consistent differences in EEG measures (used to measure cortical arousal) between extroverts and introverts, which casts doubt on Eysenck‘s theory
    • Oversimplification - Weakness
      The idea that all offending behaviour can be explained by a single personality type has been heavily criticised
      Moffitt (1993) - proposed several distinct types of adult male offender based on the timing of the first offence, and how long offending persists
    • Oversimplification - Weakness
      Eysenck’s criminal type is out-of-step with modern personality theories
      John Digman (1990) - five factor model of personality suggests that alongside extraversion and neuroticism, there are additional dimensions of openEZ’s, agreeableness and conscientiousness
      Multiple combinations are available and therefore a high extraversion and neuroticism does not mean offending is inevitable
    • Culture bias - weakness
      Bartol and Holanchock (1979)
      Hispanic and African-American offenders in a max security prison were divided into six groups based on their criminal history and the nature of their offence
      It was found that all 6 groups were found to be less extroverted than a non-criminal control group
      This suggested that this was because their sample was a very different cultural group than that investigated by Eysenck, which questions the generalisability of the criminal personality