as developmentally immature, selfish and concerned with immediate gratification, whereas normal children are socialised to be able to delay gratification:
people with high N or E have nervous systems that are difficult to condition to avoid anti-social behaviour
correlational = link established after crime, so the personality could be the effect of being a prisoner which brought out the traits, due to socialising with other inmates
what is an issue with some of the aspects of the criminal personality
- little evidence for criminals scoring highly for E or N, whilst P might be linked, the other personality traits seem to differ so has low reliabilty as only some are associated
what is an issue with how the criminal personality is assessed
- self report methods from a questionnaire; may have social desirability bias & demand characteristics due to concerns of self appearance - this is an issue as it lowers internal validity
a lie scale is used to show how accurately someone answers the questionnaire, as they are questions that have an answer that most would have done, so if they lie on this scale then it's likely their other answers aren't truthful
why is it an issue that this theory gives a fixed personality
- reductionist explanation as personalities can shift depending on the situation, maybe N in some situations but not in others, so there is no fixed 'true self' that directs behaviour
why is it an issue that ALL criminals are given the same crime personality
there is such variation in types of crimes committed, so it's unlikely that all criminals would share the same personality traits or motivation for different crimes; theft compared to murder
- little ways to prevent crime, or reliability with identifying those that may be vulnerable
+ could be useful for ideas with treating offenders: modify socialisation of children to ensure high N or E learn from their experiences/are conditioned
a form of irrational thinking, where a person has an error in their processing of information which causes reality to become twisted, so what is percieved is no longer truth/accurate
what evidence supports the hostile attribution bias
55 violent offenders where presented with images of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions, when compared to matched non-aggressive controls, the violent offenders where more likely to see the faces as hostile and angry