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dc.contributor.author Krakowsk,i MI
dc.contributor.author Czobor, Pál
dc.date.accessioned 2020-12-10T10:25:17Z
dc.date.available 2020-12-10T10:25:17Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.citation journalVolume=202;journalTitle=SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH;pagerange=267-273;journalAbbreviatedTitle=SCHIZOPHR RES;
dc.identifier.uri http://repo.lib.semmelweis.hu//handle/123456789/6624
dc.identifier.uri doi:10.1016/j.schres.2018.07.008
dc.description.abstract OBJECTIVE: We delineated important trait predispositions to violence, including psychopathic and impulsive traits and trait aggression, in patients with schizophrenia and in the general population. METHOD: The study included 144 subjects: 40 violent (VS's) and 34 nonviolent (NV's) patients with schizophrenia, 35 healthy controls (HC's) and 35 non-psychotic violent subjects (NPV's). We used the Psychopathy Checklist, Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire, and Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11). Life History of Aggression, psychiatric symptoms, drug/alcohol abuse and history of conduct problems were also assessed. RESULTS: The two violent groups presented with more severe psychopathy, trait aggressiveness and impulsivity than the non-violent subjects; some of these traits being more pronounced in NPV's than in VS's. We further divided the violent patients (VS's) into 2 subgroups, those with a history of conduct problems (VS-CD) and those without (VS-NCD). When we compared these 2 subgroups to each other and to NPV's, we obtained 3 distinct multivariate profiles of traits, consisting of psychopathic traits, anger, motor impulsiveness, and self-control problems. NPV's have the profile with the most severe impairments, followed by VS-CD's and then VS-NCD's. Psychiatric symptoms were more strongly associated with violence in VS-NCD's than in VS-CD's. CONCLUSION: Our study provides new insights on trait predispositions to violence. Trait aggressiveness, psychopathic and impulsive traits form a distinctive profile which underlies a core predisposition to violence across populations, including patients with schizophrenia, but particularly in those with a history of early conduct problems. In those without such problems, the symptoms of the illness play a more important role for the violent behavior.
dc.format.extent 267-273
dc.relation.ispartof urn:issn:0920-9964
dc.title Distinctive profiles of traits predisposing to violence in schizophrenia and in the general population
dc.date.updated 2019-01-03T09:44:41Z
dc.rights.holder NULL
dc.identifier.mtmt 3425640
dc.identifier.pubmed 30021703
dc.contributor.department SE/AOK/K/Pszichiátriai és Pszichoterápiás Klinika
dc.contributor.institution Semmelweis Egyetem


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