Biological explanations: genetic + neural

    Cards (8)

    • Offenders
      Inherit a gene/ combination of genes, that predispose them to commit crime
    • Twin and Adoption studies
      • Karl + Christiansen - studied over 3500 twin paris in Denmark
      • Found concordance rates for offender behaviour of 35% for identical twins (MZ) males + 13% for non-identical twin (DZ) males
      • Included all twins born between 1880 + 1910 in a region of Denmark
      • Offender behaviour was checked against Danish police records
      • Data shows that is' not just the behaviour that might be inherited but the predisposing traits
    • Crowe - adopted children
      • Biological mother had a criminal record had a 50% risk of having a criminal record by the age of 18
      • Biological mother doesn't have a criminal record only had a 5% risk
    • Candidate Genes
      • Tiihonen et al - genetic analysis of 800 Finnish offenders
      • 2 genes: MAOA + CDH13 -> associated w/ violent crime
      • MAOA gene regulates serotonin in the brain + has linked to aggressive behaviour
      • CDH13 gene linked to substance abuse + attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
      • Analysis found: 5-10% of all severe violent crime in Finland is attributable to the MAOA + CDH13 genotypes
    • Diathesis-stress model

      • If genetics have influence on offending it may also be moderated by the effects of the environment
      • Tendency towards offending behaviour may come about through combination of genetic predisposition + biological psychological trigger E.G, being raised in a dysfunctional environment/ having criminal role models
    • Neural explanations
      • Neural differences in brains of offenders + non-offenders
      • Evidence in this area involves individuals with antisocial personality disorder (APD)
      • APD is associated w/ reduced emotional response, lack of empathy for feelings of others + a condition that characterises many convicted offenders
    • Prefrontal cortex
      • Raine - conducted many studies of the APD brain, reporting that there are several dozen brain-imaging studies demonstrating that individuals w/ antisocial personalities have reduced activity in the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that regulates emotional behaviour
      • Raine + his colleagues - 11% reduction in volume of grey matter in prefrontal cortex of people with APD compared to controls
    • Mirror neurons
      • Recent research suggests that offenders w/ APD can experience empathy but they do so more sporadically than the rest of us
      • Keysers - only when offenders were asked to empathise did their empathy reaction activate
      • Suggests APD individuals aren't w/ out empathy, but may have neura 'switch' that can be turned on + off, unlike the 'normal' brain which has the empathy switch permanently on
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