Research Topics
| J P NewmanSummaryAffiliation: University of Wisconsin Country: USA Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
The impact of motivationally neutral cues on psychopathic individuals: assessing the generality of the response modulation hypothesisJ P Newman
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin Madison 53706 1611, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 106:563-75. 1997..As predicted by the RM hypothesis, peripheral presentation of motivationally neutral cues produced significantly less interference in low-NA psychopathic individuals than in low-NA controls...
Passive avoidance in psychopathic offenders: a replication and extensionJ P Newman
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin Madison 53706, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 107:527-32. 1998..As in past research, comparable comparisons involving African American offenders were not statistically significant...
Are all psychopathic individuals low-anxious?W A Schmitt
Department of Psychology, Brogden Building, University of Wisconsin Madison 53706, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 108:353-8. 1999..These findings suggest that either (a) the traditional belief that all psychopathic individuals are low-anxious is incorrect or (b) the PCL-R is not an adequate measure of primary psychopathy...
Approach and avoidance motivation in psychopathic criminal offenders during passive avoidanceP A Arnett
Department of Psychology, Washington State University, Pullman 99164 4820, USA
J Pers Soc Psychol 72:1413-28. 1997..Further research is needed to determine if excessive activation by reward and poor response modulation are associated with passive avoidance deficits and other characteristics of low-anxiety psychopathic offenders...
Testing Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis with psychopathic individuals: risk takers or risk averse?W A Schmitt
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin Madison 53706, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 108:538-43. 1999..Results indicated that level of anxiety, but not psychopathy, was predictive of response choices. Several limitations and implications of the study are noted...
