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      Il ruolo della neurocriminologia nella costruzione di un profilo criminologico dell'omicida seriale

      Rivista di Criminologia, Vittimologia e Sicurezza
      Società Italiana Vittimologia

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          The new look of behavioral genetics in developmental psychopathology: gene-environment interplay in antisocial behaviors.

          This article reviews behavioral-genetic research to show how it can help address questions of causation in developmental psychopathology. The article focuses on studies of antisocial behavior, because these have been leading the way in investigating environmental as well as genetic influences on psychopathology. First, the article illustrates how behavioral-genetic methods are being newly applied to detect the best candidates for genuine environmental causes among the many risk factors for antisocial behavior. Second, the article examines findings of interaction between genes and environments (G x E) associated with antisocial behavior, outlining steps for testing hypotheses of measured G x E. Third, the article envisages future work on gene-environment interplay, arguing that it is an interesting and profitable way forward for psychopathology research. Copyright 2005 APA, all rights reserved.
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            Affective neuroscience and psychophysiology: toward a synthesis.

            This article reviews the author's program of research on the neural substrates of emotion and affective style and their behavioral and peripheral biological correlates. Two core dimensions along which affect is organized are approach and withdrawal. Some of the key circuitry underlying approach and withdrawal components of emotion is reviewed with an emphasis on the role played by different sectors of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and amygdala. Affective style refers to individual differences in valence-specific features of emotional reactivity and regulation. The different parameters of affective style can be objectively measured using specific laboratory probes. Relations between individual differences in prefrontal and amygdala function and specific components of affective style are illustrated. The final section of the article concludes with a brief discussion of plasticity in the central circuitry of emotion and the possibility that this circuitry can be shaped by training experiences that might potentially promote a more resilient, positive affective style. The implications of this body of work for a broader conception of psychophysiology and for training the next generation of psychophysiologists are considered in the conclusion.
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              Limbic abnormalities in affective processing by criminal psychopaths as revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Rivista di Criminologia, Vittimologia e Sicurezza
                Società Italiana Vittimologia
                1971-033X
                September 2015
                Article
                10.14664/rcvs/255
                74b502da-df6d-4611-9e49-2a4356bf863b
                © 2015Società Italiana Vittimologia

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History

                Social & Behavioral Sciences,Law
                Social & Behavioral Sciences, Law

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