A person's eyes can reveal if they are a psychopath or not, scientists have found.
The research team from Cardiff and Swansea Universities have been looking at the effects nasty images have on psychopathic and non-psychopathic prisoners.
The eyes of psychopaths have an unusual reaction when they are shown images of nasty things, such as mutilated bodies and threatening dogs, reveals a new study by researchers at Cardiff and Swansea Universities.
The team examined the effect of disturbing images on offenders who are psychopathic and offenders who aren’t and found a marked difference in their eye response: the eyes of psychopathic offenders did not show pupil enlargement while those of non-psychopathic offenders did.
Lead author, Dr Dan Burley, from Cardiff University’s School of Psychology, said:
“Our findings provide physical evidence of an emotional deficit common to psychopathic offenders".
“The pupil has long been known to be an indicator of a person’s arousal".
"Card sharps have learnt to look carefully at the eyes of their opponents to gauge if they have a great hand, and many an astute salesperson knows to up their price if your eyes reveal your excitement at their product. Likewise, the pupil usually dilates when an image shocks or scares us. The fact that this normal physiological response to threat is reduced in psychopathic offenders provides us with an obvious physical marker for this condition.”
Professor Nicola Gray, a clinical and forensic psychologist from Swansea University, who provided clinical supervision for the project, added: “This is one of the first times we have objective, physiological, evidence of an emotional deficit underpinning the offending behaviour of psychopathic offenders that does not depend on invasive methods or expensive equipment. We hope to be able to develop this methodology to assist with clinical assessment and intervention in offender populations.”
Interestingly, the psychopathic offenders’ eyes showed a normal response to positive images, such as puppies or happy couples, showing that psychopathy is not associated with an overall difficulty in responding to emotion, but rather a specific insensitivity to threatening information.
Professor Robert Snowden from Cardiff University, who supervised the research, concluded: “many psychopathic offenders appear to be bold, confident, and can act in cold-blooded manner. It’s much easier to act bold if you have no feelings of fear, and to be cold-blooded if there is no emotion to get in the way of the act.”
Nadja Heym, senior lecturer in psychology at Nottingham Trent University previously said that psychopaths may struggle to recognise fear or sadness, they're more than capable of experiencing other emotions like happiness, joy, surprise and disgust.
And although "they're less responsive to threats and punishments, they can identify happy faces".
Nadja explained: "Their lack of emotions, such as anxiety and fear, helps them to stay calm in frightening situations.
"Experiments have shown that they have a reduced startle response. If someone gave you a fright while you were watching a horror movie, you would probably show an 'exaggerated startle response' – in other words, you’d jump out of your skin.