# A Meta-Analysis of Atypical Sexuality, Psychopathy, and Recidivism Associated With Victim Age Polymorphism

**Authors:** Samantha K. Williams, Desiree L. Elchuk, Skye Stephens

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10790632261415817 · Sexual Abuse · 2026-01-24

## TL;DR

This study finds that offenders who target victims of multiple age groups share more traits with adult-offending offenders than child-offending ones.

## Contribution

The study provides a meta-analysis linking victim age polymorphism to psychopathy, paraphilias, and recidivism.

## Key findings

- Victim age polymorphism is associated with multiple paraphilias and psychopathy.
- Polymorphic offenders show more similarities to adult-offending offenders in criminogenic traits.
- Generalist criminogenic needs like antisociality may be more relevant for managing polymorphic offenders.

## Abstract

Victim age polymorphism describes a pattern of sexual offending in which individuals target victims from multiple distinct age categories (e.g., both child and adult victims). Research on victim age polymorphism and its association with risk-related domains — namely atypical sexuality and antisociality — and recidivism is mixed, potentially due to methodological differences across studies (e.g., how victim age is classified). This meta-analysis (k = 23, N = 12,333) examined associations between victim age polymorphism, the two main risk-related domains (atypical sexuality, antisociality), and recidivism. Meta-regression and the between-level Q statistic were used to examine various methodological differences that might contribute to disparate findings. Results indicated that victim age polymorphism was associated with multiple paraphilias, psychopathy, and recidivism. Moderator analyses were limited due to the small number of studies and did not consistently explain the variation in effect sizes. Overall, individuals who are polymorphic share more clinically relevant similarities to individuals who offend exclusively against adults than those who exclusively offend against children. These findings suggest that a greater focus on generalist criminogenic needs (e.g., antisociality) may be warranted in the management of individuals who are polymorphic.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** antisociality (MESH:D000987), paraphilias (MESH:D010262)

## Full text

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## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916886/full.md

## References

68 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916886/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916886