2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2013.01.007
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High-risk sexual offenders: An examination of sexual fantasy, sexual paraphilia, psychopathy, and offence characteristics

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Cited by 71 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…In other words, violence would become self-rewarding and consequently self-perpetuating. Indeed, psychopathy has been associated with the derivation of pleasure from violence and the use of gratuitous violence in multiple samples [5254, 154]. Foulkes et al [155] reported positive correlations between all facets of psychopathy and enjoyment of callous treatment of others in two diverse samples.…”
Section: Development Of Psychopathic Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, violence would become self-rewarding and consequently self-perpetuating. Indeed, psychopathy has been associated with the derivation of pleasure from violence and the use of gratuitous violence in multiple samples [5254, 154]. Foulkes et al [155] reported positive correlations between all facets of psychopathy and enjoyment of callous treatment of others in two diverse samples.…”
Section: Development Of Psychopathic Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although associated with various types of sexual offending, some studies have found weak relationships between psychopathy and overall sexual offending (Hare et al, 2000;Knight and Guay, 2006). This may in part be because rates (and levels) of psychopathy differ between groups of sex offenders (Firestone et al, 2000;Porter et al, 2000Porter et al, , 2003Woodworth et al, 2013), with rates tending to be higher in rapists (ranging between 25% and 45%; Porter et al, 2000;Woodworth et al, 2013), especially sadistic rapists (Barbaree et al, 1994;Hare et al, 1999) and sexual homicide offenders (up to 97%; Firestone et al, 1998). Porter and colleagues (2000) suggested that a significant proportion of sexual offender heterogeneity (e.g., criminal diversity, degree of empathy, impulsivity, and victim types) may be related to psychopathic traits.…”
Section: Sexual Offendingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, a number of studies have demonstrated a relationship between deviant sexual fantasies and negative emotional/affective states (Looman, 1995;McKibben, Proulx, & Lusignan, 1994;Proulx, McKibben, & Lusignan, 1996), personality traits (Curnoe & Langevin, 2002;Williams, Cooper, Howell, Yuille, & Paulhus, 2009), behavior (MacCulloch et al 1983Woodworth, Freimuth, Hutton, Carpenter, Agar, & Logan, 2013) and cognition Zurbriggen & Yost, 2004). Thus, rather than being restricted to sexual arousal, this research suggests that deviant sexual fantasy is a much more multifaceted phenomenon (Bartels & Gannon, 2011).…”
Section: Recent Developmentsmentioning
confidence: 85%