five

Data from: General trust impedes perception of self-reported primary psychopathy in thin slices of social interaction

收藏
DataCite Commons2025-04-24 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://doi.library.ubc.ca/10.14288/1.0397634
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
<b>Abstract</b><br/>Little is known about people’s ability to detect subclinical psychopathy from others’ quotidian social behavior, or about the correlates of variation in this ability. This study sought to address these questions using a thin slice personality judgment paradigm. We presented 108 undergraduate judges (70.4% female) with 1.5 minute video thin slices of zero-acquaintance triadic conversations among other undergraduates (targets: n = 105, 57.1% female). Judges completed self-report measures of general trust, caution, and empathy. Target individuals had completed the Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy (LSRP) scale. Judges viewed the videos in one of three conditions: complete audio, silent, or audio from which semantic content had been removed using low-pass filtering. Using a novel other-rating version of the LSRP, judges’ ratings of targets’ primary psychopathy levels were significantly positively associated with targets’ self-reports, but only in the complete audio condition. Judge general trust and target LSRP interacted, such that judges higher in general trust made less accurate judgments with respect to targets higher in primary and total psychopathy. Results are consistent with a scenario in which psychopathic traits are maintained in human populations by negative frequency dependent selection operating through the costs of detecting psychopathy in others.
提供机构:
The University of British Columbia
创建时间:
2021-05-21
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务