2.1

Cards (90)

  • What is the focus of biological theories of criminality?
    They explain criminal behavior through biology
  • What are the two main types of biological theories of criminality?
    Genetic and physiological theories
  • What do biological theories suggest about criminal tendencies?
    They can be genetic and inherited
  • When did genetic theories of criminal behavior emerge?
    In the 1700s with modern criminology
  • What does the XYY theory suggest about criminality?
    It links crime to a chromosomal abnormality
  • How many chromosomes do humans usually have?
    46 chromosomes
  • What is the significance of the Y chromosome?
    It determines male sex characteristics
  • What is the prevalence of XYY syndrome in the prison population?
    15 per 2,000 in prisons
  • What do twin studies suggest about criminal behavior?
    Genetics may increase risk for criminality
  • What are monozygotic twins?
    Identical twins from one fertilized egg
  • What is concordance in twin studies?
    When both twins share a characteristic
  • What did Johannes Lange's twin study find?
    MZ twins had higher concordance for crime
  • What were the concordance rates found by Christiansen for male twins?
    35% for MZ and 13% for DZ
  • What do adoption studies compare?
    Biological and adoptive parents' influences
  • What do physiological theories focus on?
    A person's physical form as an indicator
  • Who is known as the Father of Modern Criminology?
    Cesare Lombroso
  • What did Lombroso argue about criminals?
    They are a separate species with primitive features
  • What did Sheldon propose about body types?
    They correlate with criminal behavior tendencies
  • What are the three somatotypes identified by Sheldon?
    Endomorphic, ectomorphic, mesomorphic
  • What is the link between brain damage and criminal behavior?
    Damage to the pre-frontal cortex alters behavior
  • What did Raine et al. (1994) find in their study?
    Damage in the pre-frontal cortex of criminals
  • What is the role of serotonin in behavior?
    It regulates mood and aggression levels
  • What foods can help raise serotonin levels?
    Dark chocolate, nuts, salmon, turkey
  • What is 'roid rage'?
    Extreme violence from steroid use
  • Who was Phineas Gage?
    A railroad worker with a brain injury
  • What changes occurred in Gage's behavior after his accident?
    He became anti-social and extravagant
  • What did the Canadian study find about head injuries and prison?
    Injured individuals are twice as likely to be imprisoned
  • What is the impact of diet on neurochemistry?
    It can influence aggression and mood
  • What is a PET scan used for?
    To produce detailed images of the body
  • What is the significance of the Disabilities Trust research?
    It highlights traumatic brain injury prevalence in offenders
  • What should students be familiar with for exams?
    General theories rather than specific theorists
  • What is the exam question format likely to include?
    General theories of criminality
  • Who is the founder of the physiological theories of criminality?
    Lombroso
  • What did Lombroso believe about criminals?
    They failed to evolve at the same pace
  • How did Lombroso identify criminals?
    By their physical characteristics indicating inferiority
  • What physical traits did Lombroso associate with murderers?
    Cold, glinty stare, bloodshot eyes, hawk-like nose
  • What concept did Lombroso's idea of 'born bad' lead to?
    Later biological theories emphasizing heredity
  • What are the strengths of Lombroso's theory?
    • Gave criminology scientific credibility
    • Supported by Goring's findings on intelligence
    • Suggested attractiveness affects guilt perception
    • Challenged the notion of criminals as evil
    • Initiated offender profiling
  • What are the weaknesses of Lombroso's theory?
    • No control group for comparison
    • Possible inaccuracies due to disfiguration
    • Not all with atavistic features are criminals
    • Scientific racism in defining features
    • Extremely deterministic outlook
  • What did Sheldon link to body type and personality?
    Different features of personality