The latest piece of brain-scanning research, as outlined in the Times:

A difference between the brains of psychopaths and ordinary people has been identified in a study that could promise new approaches to diagnosing and treating the disorder.

Research by British scientists using advanced brain-scanning techniques has revealed that a critical connection between two regions of the brain appears to be abnormal in psychopaths.

The findings are preliminary and do not show that brain anatomy causes psychopathy but they suggest a plausible biological explanation for the antisocial and amoral behaviour that characterises the condition.

If the link to brain wiring can be proved it would raise the prospect of using brain scans to help in diagnosing psychopaths, and provide insights with which to develop new therapies….

Psychopathy is a disorder in which people struggle to control their impulses, and behave manipulatively, aggressively, dishonestly or exploitatively towards others. They rarely show remorse for their actions.

It is strongly associated with criminal behaviour and recidivism, and psychopaths are thought to make up about 15 per cent of the UK prison population. Criminals who are psychopaths commit 50 per cent more offences than those who do not have the disorder. The origins of the condition are unknown, though genetic and social explanations have been proposed. It is generally diagnosed through psychiatric assessment and questionnaires.

Already we're getting a bit carried away here. Can psychopathy really be so glibly classified as a disorder? Isn't it just a catch-all name (pathology of the psyche) for anti-social bastards? – except bastards doesn't sound so scientific.

In the new research, a team led by Professor Declan Murphy, Michael Craig and Marco Catani, of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College, London, compared the brain anatomy of pscyhopaths to that of ordinary people using a new scanning technique called diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI). They recruited nine men who had been diagnosed as psychopaths, through mental health services, including people who had convictions for attempted murder, manslaughter, multiple rapes and false imprisonment. None was currently serving a prison sentence. Their brains were scanned using DT-MRI, and the results compared with those obtained for normal volunteers of a similar age and IQ. The results are published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

The team found that a white-matter tract called the uncinate fasciculus (UF), which connects parts of the brain called the amygdala and the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), differed significantly between the psychopaths and the control group. People who had been diagnosed with more extreme psychopathy showed greater degrees of abnormality in this tract.

Dr Craig said the results were interesting because of the function of the two brain regions connected by the UF. The amygdala is involved in emotional responses such as fear, disgust and pleasure, while the OFC is involved in higher decision-making.

“There needs to be a connection between these two areas of the brain, which deal with emotions and the control of emotions,” Dr Craig said. “If it doesn’t work, you could see how that could lead to problems.”

Professor Murphy said the findings offered the most compelling evidence yet that altered brain anatomy might be involved in psychopathy.

It's all a bit too straightforward for me. Nine individuals – hardly a substantial sample – diagnosed as psychopaths, ie deemed to be nasty bastards, turn out to have just the kind of structural brain abnormality that you might expect, involving connections between emotion and higher decision-making. The researchers must've thought they'd struck gold.

A new scanning technique was used, we're told, and it may well be that the usual concerns about neuroscientists' over-reliance on fMRI technology don't apply so strongly here. Also. of course, there's always going to be an impulse to reject findings like these on the grounds that a reduction of our moral sense to a simple piece of brain circuitry is inevitably going to be offensive to our notion of ourselves and of our belief in personal moral responsibility – despite knowing, if we believe in neurology as a science, that altered brain anatomy must be involved in psychopathy in some way.

So this could be a major finding, but I'm not buying it without a great deal more research. I can't help feeling that it's all got to be a lot more complicated than this – while acknowledging that my scepticism may not be entirely disinterested or rational. It just smacks too much, the way this research is going, of all those science fiction dystopias; of Soviet-style psychiatry…
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