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Study: Potential criminal behavior evident at age 3

M

movingtocally

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Children who don't show normal fear responses to loud, unpleasant sounds at the age of 3 may be more likely to commit crimes as adults, according to a new study.
Yu Gao and colleagues in the United States and the United Kingdom compared results from a study of almost 1,800 children born in 1969 and 1970 on the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius to criminal records of group members 20 years later.
At age 3, the children were tested to gauge their level of "fear conditioning," or fear of consequences. The idea is that children who associate unpleasant sounds or other unpleasant experiences with fear will be less likely to commit antisocial acts because they will link such experiences with punishments for those acts.
Researchers tested the 3-year-olds' responses to unpleasant noises using a lie detector. When they looked at any criminal records among the participants 20 years later, 137 of them (131 male, 6 female) had at least one criminal conviction.
Compared to almost 300 participants with no criminal records, those 137 participants had a much lower response to the noises at the age of 3.
The findings could link previous studies suggesting that psychopaths and children with behavioral problems at the age of 11 have similar abnormalities in a part of the brain called the amygdala. That structure is largely responsible for directing fear of consequences.
Because this study controlled for social factors such as parents' education, number of parents in the home, socioeconomic status, and family size, biology is the likely reason for the "blunted emotions" registered in some of the 3 year olds, study co-author, Dr. Adrian Raine of the University of York in England, told Reuters Health in a telephone interview.
Still, the researchers warn against reading too much into their findings. The results do not offer a biological way to identify future criminals.
"Crime is clearly a complex construct involving multiple interactions between genetic, brain, family and social influences," they write.
But, they conclude, the findings provide some support for the idea that the potential for antisocial and criminal behavior may be hard-wired in young brains - which means that if the results hold, "efforts to prevent and treat this worldwide behavior problem will increasingly rely on early health interventions."


SOURCE: American Journal of Psychiatry, published online November 16, 2009.
 

cocktail frank

Ubiquitous
Mentor
ICMag Donor
Veteran
it's all about your personal arousal rate. (not sexual tho)
it takes some people more to get a rush out of a certain act.
thats why some folks jump out of planes to get their adrenaline pumping.
while others can see an image over the net and get worked up.

it's the people who take more exposure to something to get aroused that can get into alot of trouble with the law.
for example, some will look at blood and possibly get sick or pass out, while others can look at a pic of a violent death while eating a sandwich, never flinching.
 

Yes4Prop215

Active member
Veteran
i think we are all attracted to crime in some way, every single person. its embedded in our genetics since the beginning of man. scams, schemes, prostitution, illicit commodities, robbery, murder. some people know how to control their actions some dont.
 

JimBeamKush

Member
MAybe the kids who responded less to the noises were just dumber and they got caught. I do not know ONE friend of mine who has committed at least one crime, some have gotten caught and some have not.

Any crime from just street fighting to DUI.
 

Norrath

Member
I side with cocktail frank, i think he's onto something.

I was actually thinking the exact same thing not 24 hours or so ago..VEIRD yaa...

Dont think we're all attracted to crime in some way, but i think it encompasses our whole system, society, and cultures. Everywhere we turn, as free people, it's a double edged sword, like a real life choose your own adventure....lol

just some people get more phased to certain choose your own adventure routes, and mentally block those routes from further being experienced. Unlike those books, we dont "die" or go back to such and such page when something bad happens, we get hurt, in some way or another, mentally, physically, or stolen time from prison and other disengagements.

it's the I dont care mentality that's so dangerous. but who's to say a rational person cant be a tad mysteriously dangerous eh, siding with ethics and morals learned from sane people
 
C

Cookie monster

Their study is pure bullshit imo.

"Yu Gao and colleagues in the United States and the United Kingdom compared results from a study of almost 1,800 children born in 1969 and 1970 on the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius to criminal records of group members 20 years later."

Researchers tested the 3-year-olds' responses to unpleasant noises using a lie detector. When they looked at any criminal records among the participants 20 years later, 137 of them (131 male, 6 female) had at least one criminal conviction.
Compared to almost 300 participants with no criminal records, those 137 participants had a much lower response to the noises at the age of 3.

I'd imagine in order for their study to have any sort of validity the 137 kids should have been compared to the original 1800 members of the study???
 
S

sparkjumper

Who cares man I say we behead all the deaf kids then we don't have to be concerned one way or tother.
 
C

Cookie monster

Who cares man I say we behead all the deaf kids then we don't have to be concerned one way or tother.

Should be easy enough to achieve......it's not as if they will hear us sneaking up behind them swinging an axe.

We should also kill all first born sons, some of them can turn criminal too.....
 
S

sparkjumper

We are thinking identically on this one.They won't know what hit them.You'd be sawin bone before they let out a pitiful mute ooooiiiiiii.
 
M

movingtocally

Who cares man I say we behead all the deaf kids then we don't have to be concerned one way or tother.
I just saw a great threesome vid with a deaf girl that just might change your perspective.

I'm pretty sure she enjoyed it, but who's to tell? All she said was "murrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"
 
K

kallenavndk

I just saw a great threesome vid with a deaf girl that just might change your perspective.

I'm pretty sure she enjoyed it, but who's to tell? All she said was "murrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"

omg ya killin me over here all gals that did bj on me have been deaf then:yoinks: have u notice they reach a point after along murrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr they fall into deep sleep like passing out and then u can sneak out and u wont have to pay em :yeahthats
 

Norrath

Member
omg ya killin me over here all gals that did bj on me have been deaf then:yoinks: have u notice they reach a point after along murrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr they fall into deep sleep like passing out and then u can sneak out and u wont have to pay em :yeahthats
they have the right to remain silent!
 

!!!

Now in technicolor
Veteran
Reminds me of that politician who wanted to take DNA samples of kids who showed bad behavior in school so as to help with future crime.
 

ben ttech

Active member
the medical establishment knows that your odds of life threatening disease are firmly established before your 12 months old.

scandanavian countries know this quite well, which is why their states subsidize the citizen to the greatest amount, in the year prior to their birth and post the occurance.
 

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