Mental Health News: Psychopaths have terrible senses of smell


New research suggests we may be able to sniff out psychopaths by their poor scores on a smell test.

In  the study, psychologists at Macquarie University in Australia tested the noses  of more than 70 college-age participants, all without criminal records. The  researchers had the subjects try to identify common odors (like orange, coffee  and leather) and distinguish between different scents.

The participants  then were given personality  tests to check for their level of empathy and psychopathic tendencies. For example, the subjects were asked to rate on a 5-point scale  how much they agreed with statements such as: “I purposely flatter people to get  them on my side;” “People sometimes say that I’m cold-hearted;” and “I have  broken into a building or vehicle in order to steal something or vandalize.”

Psycopathy is a personality disorder marked by superficial charm, a lack  of empathy and impulsive tendencies.

The researchers reported a  correlation between a poorer sense of smell and psychopathic personality traits.

They say this makes sense because previous research has shown that  people with such traits have decreased function in the brain’s frontal lobes, a  region associated with impulse control and acting in accordance with social  norms — and dysfunction in that part of the brain is associated with an impaired  sense of smell.

Criminal psychopaths’ speech patterns can also give them  away, according to research presented  in 2011. When speaking of their crimes, psychopaths use less emotion and  focus more on their basic needs than non-psychopaths, that research found.

Psychopaths,  believed to make up as much as 1 percent of the general population, may attempt  to fake answers during psychological evaluations, so a measure of smelling  ability could offer a helpful new way to detect psychopathic traits, the  researchers said.

The study, led by Mehmet K. Mahmut and Richard J.  Stevenson, was published recently in the journal Chemosensory Perception.

Original article here.

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