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From this Are Prisoners More Psychopathic than Nonforensic Populations? Profiling Psychopathic Traits among Prisoners, Community Adults, University Students, and AdolescentsAre Prisoners More Psychopathic than Nonforensic Populations? Profiling Psychopathic Traits among Prisoners, Community Adults, University Students, and Adolescents by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Nicole Sherretts, Dominic Willmott, Mike Boulton, Krzysztof Kielkiewicz, Katarzyna Popiolek & Philip Hylandpaper, paper, I found

The Psychopatic personality traits scale (PPTS; Boduszek et al. 2016a)

is a personality-based self-reported 20-item measure designed to assess psychopathic traits in forensic and non-forensic populations. The scale was developed to measure four factors labeled affective responsiveness, cognitive responsiveness, interpersonal manipulation, and egocentricity. Each subscale consists of five items measured using “agree” (1) and “disagree” (0) format (i.e., a trait is either present or absent). Total scale scores range from 0 to 20, whereas subscale scores range from 0 to 5. Higher scores indicate increased levels of psychopathic personality traits (i.e., increased egocentricity and interpersonal manipulation and increased deficits in affective and cognitive responsiveness).

You can find the questionnaire, among other cool things :), in this paper

Introduction and validation of Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS) in a large prison sampleIntroduction and validation of Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS) in a large prison sample by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Katie Dhingra, Matt DeLisi.

This is the questionnaire

enter image description here

From this Are Prisoners More Psychopathic than Nonforensic Populations? Profiling Psychopathic Traits among Prisoners, Community Adults, University Students, and Adolescents by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Nicole Sherretts, Dominic Willmott, Mike Boulton, Krzysztof Kielkiewicz, Katarzyna Popiolek & Philip Hylandpaper, paper, I found

The Psychopatic personality traits scale (PPTS; Boduszek et al. 2016a)

is a personality-based self-reported 20-item measure designed to assess psychopathic traits in forensic and non-forensic populations. The scale was developed to measure four factors labeled affective responsiveness, cognitive responsiveness, interpersonal manipulation, and egocentricity. Each subscale consists of five items measured using “agree” (1) and “disagree” (0) format (i.e., a trait is either present or absent). Total scale scores range from 0 to 20, whereas subscale scores range from 0 to 5. Higher scores indicate increased levels of psychopathic personality traits (i.e., increased egocentricity and interpersonal manipulation and increased deficits in affective and cognitive responsiveness).

You can find the questionnaire, among other cool things :), in this paper

Introduction and validation of Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS) in a large prison sample by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Katie Dhingra, Matt DeLisi.

This is the questionnaire

enter image description here

From this Are Prisoners More Psychopathic than Nonforensic Populations? Profiling Psychopathic Traits among Prisoners, Community Adults, University Students, and Adolescents by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Nicole Sherretts, Dominic Willmott, Mike Boulton, Krzysztof Kielkiewicz, Katarzyna Popiolek & Philip Hylandpaper, paper, I found

The Psychopatic personality traits scale (PPTS; Boduszek et al. 2016a)

is a personality-based self-reported 20-item measure designed to assess psychopathic traits in forensic and non-forensic populations. The scale was developed to measure four factors labeled affective responsiveness, cognitive responsiveness, interpersonal manipulation, and egocentricity. Each subscale consists of five items measured using “agree” (1) and “disagree” (0) format (i.e., a trait is either present or absent). Total scale scores range from 0 to 20, whereas subscale scores range from 0 to 5. Higher scores indicate increased levels of psychopathic personality traits (i.e., increased egocentricity and interpersonal manipulation and increased deficits in affective and cognitive responsiveness).

You can find the questionnaire, among other cool things :), in this paper

Introduction and validation of Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS) in a large prison sample by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Katie Dhingra, Matt DeLisi.

This is the questionnaire

enter image description here

Source Link
user25482
user25482

From this Are Prisoners More Psychopathic than Nonforensic Populations? Profiling Psychopathic Traits among Prisoners, Community Adults, University Students, and Adolescents by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Nicole Sherretts, Dominic Willmott, Mike Boulton, Krzysztof Kielkiewicz, Katarzyna Popiolek & Philip Hylandpaper, paper, I found

The Psychopatic personality traits scale (PPTS; Boduszek et al. 2016a)

is a personality-based self-reported 20-item measure designed to assess psychopathic traits in forensic and non-forensic populations. The scale was developed to measure four factors labeled affective responsiveness, cognitive responsiveness, interpersonal manipulation, and egocentricity. Each subscale consists of five items measured using “agree” (1) and “disagree” (0) format (i.e., a trait is either present or absent). Total scale scores range from 0 to 20, whereas subscale scores range from 0 to 5. Higher scores indicate increased levels of psychopathic personality traits (i.e., increased egocentricity and interpersonal manipulation and increased deficits in affective and cognitive responsiveness).

You can find the questionnaire, among other cool things :), in this paper

Introduction and validation of Psychopathic Personality Traits Scale (PPTS) in a large prison sample by Daniel Boduszek, Agata Debowska, Katie Dhingra, Matt DeLisi.

This is the questionnaire

enter image description here