Authors
Sylco S Hoppenbrouwers, Jaap Munneke, Karen A Kooiman, Bethany Little, Craig S Neumann, Jan Theeuwes
Publication date
2017/12
Journal
Journal of psychopathology and behavioral assessment
Volume
39
Pages
596-604
Publisher
Springer US
Description
In the current study, a gaze-cueing experiment (similar to Dawel et al. 2015) was conducted in which the predictivity of a gaze-cue was manipulated (non-predictive vs highly predictive). This was done to assess the degree to which individuals with elevated psychopathic traits can use contextual information (i.e., the predictivity of the cue). Psychopathic traits were measured with the Self-Report Psychopathy Scale-Short Form (SRP-SF) in a mixed sample (undergraduate students and community members). Results showed no group difference in reaction times between high and non-predictive cueing blocks, suggesting that individuals with elevated psychopathic traits can indeed use contextual information when it is relevant. In addition, we observed that fearful facial expressions did not lead to a change in reaction times in individuals with elevated psychopathic traits, whereas individuals with low …
Total citations
201920202021202220233311
Scholar articles
SS Hoppenbrouwers, J Munneke, KA Kooiman, B Little… - Journal of psychopathology and behavioral …, 2017