Rethinking psychopathy: Fear not absent but enjoyed, new study suggests

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New research suggests that individuals with elevated psychopathic traits might not experience a lack of fear but instead find enjoyment in frightening situations. The findings, published in the Journal of Personality, challenge long-held beliefs about the relationship between psychopathic tendencies and fear experience.

Psychopathy is a psychological condition characterized by a spectrum of behaviors and personality traits, including lack of empathy, superficial charm, manipulativeness, deceitfulness, and impulsivity. Psychopaths often exhibit a disregard for the rights and feelings of others, leading to antisocial behavior.

Traditionally, psychopathy has been associated with abnormalities in fear processing, with most theories positing that individuals with psychopathic traits exhibit a reduced or absent fear response. This reduction in fear has been thought to underlie some of the risk-taking and antisocial behaviors observed in psychopathic individuals.

The fear enjoyment hypothesis offers a novel perspective on how individuals with psychopathic traits perceive and experience fear. Contrary to traditional views that emphasize a lack of fear, this hypothesis suggests that psychopaths might not only experience fear but may actually enjoy it. According to this theory, fear-inducing situations might be appraised positively by those with high levels of psychopathic traits, leading them to seek out such experiences.

To further investigate the fear enjoyment hypothesis, the researchers recruited participants from both academic settings and the general population. Efforts were made to specifically engage individuals from contexts likely to exhibit higher levels of the traits of interest. This included targeting communities engaged in high-risk sports, such as boxing, and those frequenting tattoo studios — environments where higher psychopathy scores, sensation seeking, and fear enjoyment might be more prevalent.

The final sample of the study included 353 participants, with females making up nearly 69% of the group. The participants ranged in age from 18 to 77 years, with an average age of 37.30 years.

The study was structured into two main parts: a survey component and an experimental component. The survey included various questionnaires designed to measure participants’ current emotional state, psychopathic traits, sensation-seeking tendencies, and their ability to enjoy fear, as captured by the Fear Enjoyment Questionnaire (FEQ).

The experimental component involved exposing participants to six video clips categorized into three types: excitement-evoking, fear-evoking, and neutral (control). These clips were presented in a randomized order to minimize order effects, and participants viewed them from a first-person perspective to enhance immersion and emotional engagement. After watching each clip, participants rated their emotional responses using a series of adjectives that captured both positive and negative aspects of their experience.

In line with the fear enjoyment hypothesis, the researchers found a significant positive association between self-reported fear enjoyment and psychopathic traits. In addition, individuals scoring higher on Factor 1 psychopathic traits (which include interpersonal and affective components such as lack of empathy and superficial charm) demonstrated a unique response pattern to fear-inducing videos. These participants reported significantly more positive and fewer negative emotions in response to fear-inducing stimuli compared to their reactions to excitement-evoking or neutral stimuli.

While the study confirmed the hypothesis that individuals with high levels of Factor 1 psychopathy traits experience fear-inducing situations more positively and with less negativity, the findings related to psychopathic boldness presented a more complex picture. Psychopathic boldness is characterized by a strong resilience to stress and a propensity for social dominance.

Participants scoring high in boldness showed a pattern of less negative appraisal across all types of video stimuli, including fear-inducing, excitement-evoking, and neutral videos. This suggests that boldness, as a trait, might influence a general tendency towards less negative emotionality or a broader stress immunity rather than a specific enjoyment of fear.

The differential findings related to boldness highlight the multifaceted nature of psychopathy and suggest that the subjective experience of fear and its enjoyment might be more closely tied to the interpersonal and affective deficits encapsulated in Factor 1 traits.

The findings from this study provide additional evidence in support of the fear enjoyment hypothesis. However, the study is not without its limitations. Its online format and reliance on self-reported data mean that further research, particularly studies that can measure physiological responses to fear, is necessary to deepen our understanding of these findings.

The study, “The joy of being frightened: Fear experience in psychopathy,” was authored by Miriam J. Hofmann, Andreas Mokros, and Sabrina Schneider.