Psychopathy and COVID-19: Triarchic model traits as predictors of disease-risk perceptions and emotional well-being during a global pandemic

Personality and Individual Differences - Journal Article

This study extended recent research showing that perceptions of disease risk are associated with emotional wellbeing during COVID-19 by examining how psychopathic traits of boldness, meanness, and disinhibition influence these perceptions and psychological outcomes. During the Italian national lockdown, a large community sample (Mage = 31.3 years) completed online questionnaire measures of the triarchic psychopathic traits, perceptions of disease susceptibility and danger, and recent well-being. Path analyses revealed differing roles for the triarchic traits: boldness and meanness predicted greater well-being (lower stress, higher positive affect) and disinhibition predicted lower well-being. Further, boldness and meanness were linked to well-being through distinct indirect pathways of low perceived susceptibility to infection (boldness) and low perceived dangerousness of COVID-19 (boldness and meanness). Findings speak to the triarchic model’s utility in explaining socioemotional phenomena during times of crisis and support the distinct biobehavioral conceptualizations of boldness as low threat sensitivity, meanness as low affiliative capacity, and disinhibition as deficient affective and behavioral control.

Information
  • Volume: 176
  • Pages: 110770
  • Date: 2021
  • Series title:
  • Journal abbreviation:Personality and Individual Differences
  • DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2021.110770
Creators
Claudio Sica, Emily R. Perkins, Robert D. Latzman, Corrado Caudek, Ilaria Colpizzi, Gioia Bottesi, Maria Caruso, Paolo Giulini, Silvia Cerea, Christopher J. Patrick
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