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    Date Issued2007 (1)2003 (1)Author
    Lee, Zina (2)
    Vincent, Gina M. (2)Corrado, Raymond R. (1)Douglas, Kevin S. (1)Hart, Stephen D. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Psychiatry (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordAdolescent (2)Antisocial Personality Disorder (2)Female (2)Health Services Research (2)Humans (2)View MoreJournalBehavioral sciences and the law (1)Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines (1)

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    Youth with psychopathy features are not a discrete class: a taxometric analysis

    Murrie, Daniel C.; Marcus, David K.; Douglas, Kevin S.; Lee, Zina; Salekin, Randall T.; Vincent, Gina M. (2007-06-27)
    BACKGROUND: Recently, researchers have sought to measure psychopathy-like features among youth in hopes of identifying children who may be progressing toward a particularly destructive form of adult pathology. However, it remains unclear whether psychopathy-like personality features among youth are best conceptualized as dimensional (distributed along a continuum) or taxonic (such that youth with psychopathic personality characteristics are qualitatively distinct from non-psychopathic youth). METHODS: This study applied taxometric analyses (MAMBAC, MAXEIG, and L-Mode) to scores from two primary measures of youth psychopathy features: the Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version (N = 757) and the self-report Antisocial Process Screening Device (N = 489) among delinquent boys. RESULTS: All analyses supported a dimensional structure, indicating that psychopathy features among youth are best understood as existing along a continuum. CONCLUSIONS: Although youth clearly vary in the degree to which they manifest psychopathy-like personality traits, there is no natural, discrete class of young 'psychopaths.' This finding has implications for developmental theory, treatment, assessment strategies, research, and clinical/forensic practice.
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    The validity of the Antisocial Process Screening Device as a self-report measure of psychopathy in adolescent offenders

    Lee, Zina; Vincent, Gina M.; Hart, Stephen D.; Corrado, Raymond R. (2003-12-30)
    There is a growing interest in the assessment of adolescent psychopathy to enable early treatment and intervention. Recently, a self-report measure has been developed to assess psychopathic traits in adolescents. The Antisocial Process Screening Device (APSD), a self-report measure of psychopathic traits, and the Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version (PCL:YV), a clinical rating scale, were administered to a sample of 100 incarcerated male adolescent offenders to assess the concurrent validity of the APSD. Results indicated that the APSD had limited concurrent validity with respect to the PCL:YV and that there appears to be a method effect in the measurement of psychopathy. Thus, it appears the APSD did not assess psychopathy in a manner parallel to that of the PCL:YV.
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