Examining the Association Between Psychopathy Clusters and Risk-Taking Behaviors
R. Gómez Leal, P. Fernández-Berrocal, A. Megías-Robles

TL;DR
This study explores how different types of psychopathy relate to risk-taking behaviors using a person-centered approach.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct psychopathy subgroups and their unique associations with risk-taking behaviors.
Findings
The High psychopathy group showed higher risk-taking and lower risk perception.
The Low criminal tendencies group exhibited more risk-taking than other non-high psychopathy groups.
Cluster analysis revealed four distinct psychopathy profiles with varying behavioral patterns.
Abstract
Psychopathy encompasses the sub-dimensions of interpersonal manipulation, callous affect, erratic lifestyle, and criminal tendencies. Most studies investigating this trait have traditionally utilized a variable-centered approach. However, in the current study, we have adopted a person-centered approach. Our objective was to analyze distinct homogeneous subgroups of individuals characterized by specific psychopathy profiles and examine their relationship with risk-taking behavior. Our sample consisted of 371 participants (26.4% men, aged 18 to 59 years), who completed the 34-item Self-Report Psychopathy Scale-III to assess psychopathy and Risk-taking behaviors were assessed using the Domain-Specific Risk-Taking Scale (DOSPERT-30). Through cluster analysis, we identified four distinct groups: Low psychopathy, Low criminal tendencies, High erratic lifestyle, and High psychopathy group.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending · Crime Patterns and Interventions · Personality Disorders and Psychopathology
