Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior

Despite widespread assumptions that psychopathy is associated with serious and repeated law-breaking, individuals with psychopathic personality traits do not invariably become chronic criminal offenders. As a partial explanation for this finding, Lykken (1995) ventured that a fearless temperament un...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas H. Costello, Ansley Unterberger, Ashley L. Watts, Scott O. Lilienfeld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00185/full
id doaj-f2e93f6dd8ea42d7a2662fd2f0717c58
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f2e93f6dd8ea42d7a2662fd2f0717c582020-11-24T23:01:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-02-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.00185320816Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial BehaviorThomas H. Costello0Ansley Unterberger1Ashley L. Watts2Scott O. Lilienfeld3Scott O. Lilienfeld4Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaDespite widespread assumptions that psychopathy is associated with serious and repeated law-breaking, individuals with psychopathic personality traits do not invariably become chronic criminal offenders. As a partial explanation for this finding, Lykken (1995) ventured that a fearless temperament underlies both psychopathic traits and heroic behavior, and that heroic individuals’ early exposure to effective socializing forces such as warm parenting or healthy self-esteem often fosters a characteristic adaption that tends to beget “successful” behaviors, thereby differentiating heroes from convicts. In this study, we investigate relations between psychopathy, principally its fearless dominance dimension, pride, and prosocial and antisocial behavior in a community sample (N = 339). Fearless dominance and self-centered impulsivity components of psychopathy yielded differential relations with authentic and hubristic pride (Tracy and Robins, 2004), such that fearless dominance was significantly positively correlated with both facets of pride while self-centered Impulsivity was significantly negatively correlated with authentic pride and significantly positively correlated with hubristic pride. Further, authentic pride moderated (potentiated) the relation between fearless dominance and transformational leadership, one of the two outcome measures for prosocial behavior employed in our investigation. Authentic pride did not moderate the relations between fearless dominance and either our other measure of prosocial behavior (heroism) or antisocial behavior, nor did positive parenting moderate the relations between psychopathy components and social behavior. Unexpectedly, hubristic pride significantly moderated the relation between impulsive-antisocial features and antisocial behavior in a protective manner.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00185/fullpsychopathyprideprosocial behaviorantisocial behaviorheroismleadership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas H. Costello
Ansley Unterberger
Ashley L. Watts
Scott O. Lilienfeld
Scott O. Lilienfeld
spellingShingle Thomas H. Costello
Ansley Unterberger
Ashley L. Watts
Scott O. Lilienfeld
Scott O. Lilienfeld
Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
Frontiers in Psychology
psychopathy
pride
prosocial behavior
antisocial behavior
heroism
leadership
author_facet Thomas H. Costello
Ansley Unterberger
Ashley L. Watts
Scott O. Lilienfeld
Scott O. Lilienfeld
author_sort Thomas H. Costello
title Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
title_short Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
title_full Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
title_fullStr Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Psychopathy and Pride: Testing Lykken’s Hypothesis Regarding the Implications of Fearlessness for Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior
title_sort psychopathy and pride: testing lykken’s hypothesis regarding the implications of fearlessness for prosocial and antisocial behavior
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Despite widespread assumptions that psychopathy is associated with serious and repeated law-breaking, individuals with psychopathic personality traits do not invariably become chronic criminal offenders. As a partial explanation for this finding, Lykken (1995) ventured that a fearless temperament underlies both psychopathic traits and heroic behavior, and that heroic individuals’ early exposure to effective socializing forces such as warm parenting or healthy self-esteem often fosters a characteristic adaption that tends to beget “successful” behaviors, thereby differentiating heroes from convicts. In this study, we investigate relations between psychopathy, principally its fearless dominance dimension, pride, and prosocial and antisocial behavior in a community sample (N = 339). Fearless dominance and self-centered impulsivity components of psychopathy yielded differential relations with authentic and hubristic pride (Tracy and Robins, 2004), such that fearless dominance was significantly positively correlated with both facets of pride while self-centered Impulsivity was significantly negatively correlated with authentic pride and significantly positively correlated with hubristic pride. Further, authentic pride moderated (potentiated) the relation between fearless dominance and transformational leadership, one of the two outcome measures for prosocial behavior employed in our investigation. Authentic pride did not moderate the relations between fearless dominance and either our other measure of prosocial behavior (heroism) or antisocial behavior, nor did positive parenting moderate the relations between psychopathy components and social behavior. Unexpectedly, hubristic pride significantly moderated the relation between impulsive-antisocial features and antisocial behavior in a protective manner.
topic psychopathy
pride
prosocial behavior
antisocial behavior
heroism
leadership
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00185/full
work_keys_str_mv AT thomashcostello psychopathyandpridetestinglykkenshypothesisregardingtheimplicationsoffearlessnessforprosocialandantisocialbehavior
AT ansleyunterberger psychopathyandpridetestinglykkenshypothesisregardingtheimplicationsoffearlessnessforprosocialandantisocialbehavior
AT ashleylwatts psychopathyandpridetestinglykkenshypothesisregardingtheimplicationsoffearlessnessforprosocialandantisocialbehavior
AT scottolilienfeld psychopathyandpridetestinglykkenshypothesisregardingtheimplicationsoffearlessnessforprosocialandantisocialbehavior
AT scottolilienfeld psychopathyandpridetestinglykkenshypothesisregardingtheimplicationsoffearlessnessforprosocialandantisocialbehavior
_version_ 1725640312892686336