Share.

    7 Kommentare

    1. „The study also has some limitations, including its cross-sectional design, which means it cannot prove that these brain structures directly cause psychopathic behavior. Additionally, the sample was relatively homogeneous, consisting entirely of adult Spanish men without severe mental health conditions. Future research should include larger and more diverse samples to confirm these findings and explore how these structural brain differences develop over time.“

      It’s funny, just yesterday I was in a thread where people were bemoaning the lack of medical study of women.

      „Limitations“ is a bit of an understatement, I think.

    2. Disordered_Steven on

      It’s all neuroinflammation at the cellular level. Things like mast cells poisoning the immune system.

      The “treatment” is likely more in and around anti-inflammatories, antihistamines, adaptogens, and gut/microbiology vs anything made in a lab.

      The neurore-regulation is kind of a 6 -24 month process. It’s purely biological but this is when people see progress aligned with therapeutic interventions. Some here call it post trauma integration….it is not well understood and the natural healing mechanisms are often disrupted with current “best” practices.

    3. Exotic-Skirt5849 on

      The study’s finding could be true for victims of trauma and this was not screened, does nobody do *any* reading anymore?

    4. „Markers“ for psychopathy almost always turn out to be markers for survivors of childhood trauma.

      The overarching point here, as always, is that if you want to make someone violent and antisocial, your best bet is to abuse them terribly from the day they are born. (And if you *don’*t want that, don’t.)

    Leave A Reply