Psychopaths are everywhere in pop culture and on social media, but experts aren’t even sure the diagnosis is a real thing.
These psychopathic villains are evil characters that have been portrayed perfectly, and therefore, remain engraved in our ...
The term "psychopath" is used to describe someone who is callous, unemotional, and morally depraved. Although not an official mental health diagnosis, it is often used in clinical and legal settings ...
As an expert on personality disorders, people often ask me about psychopathy. It seems everybody has had an ex, a boss, a neighbor or a relative who they suspect has traits of it. People are curious ...
Hollywood has a long, long history of psychopaths, some of them even on film. Michael Douglas' Gordon Gekko from Wall Street, The Silence of the Lambs' infamous Hannibal Lecter, brought to chilling ...
A student recently shared that in 1911, her relative was institutionally discharged with a diagnosis of Constitutional Psychopath. She wondered if it meant her ancestor was a socially corrupt, morally ...
Can you learn how to spot a psychopath before you become a victim? The term "psychopath" is often used to describe an individual who lacks empathy and is deceitful, manipulative, unemotional (not ...
When you start to notice them, psychopaths seem to be everywhere. This is especially true of people in powerful places. By one estimate, as many as 20% of business leaders have "clinically relevant ...
Not all psychopaths are created equal. In America, about 1.2% of adult men and 0.3% to 0.7% of adult women are considered to have clinically significant levels of psychopathic traits, according to the ...
There seems to be a common point of view in the media these days and it unfolds something like this: Premise: A disturbingly high percentage of people in prominent leadership roles, such as CEOs, lie ...
When you start to notice them, psychopaths seem to be everywhere. This is especially true of people in powerful places. By one estimate, as many as 20% of business leaders have “clinically relevant ...