मराठी

Personality Disorder - Anti-social Personality Disorder

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Topics

Estimated time: 15 minutes
  • Introduction
  • Prevalence and Juvenile Delinquency
  • Causes of Anti-social Behaviour
  • Societal Impact
  • Key Points: Anti-social Personality Disorder
CISCE: Class 12

Meaning

  • DSM-IV places ASPD in Cluster B as the most disturbing personality disorder.
  • Individuals manipulate others and act callously without regard for feelings.
  • They ignore social rules, cultural norms, and legal systems completely.
  • People with ASPD behave irresponsibly and impulsively and learn nothing from punishment.
  • They feel no guilt or remorse for harming others through crimes.
  • Common examples include thieves, drug addicts, prostitutes, and murderers.
  • Total disregard for others' rights leads to robbery, assaults, and abuse.
CISCE: Class 12

Prevalence and Juvenile Delinquency

  • Antisocial behaviour affects 5-15% of the general population based on the criteria.
  • This rate rises dramatically to 20-80% among prison inmates.
  • In children and adolescents, this manifests as juvenile delinquency.
  • Juvenile delinquents show the same traits that develop into adult ASPD.
  • Most prisoners exhibit antisocial personality characteristics.
CISCE: Class 12

Causes of Anti-social Behaviour

1. Genetic and Biological Causes

  • Low serotonin levels are linked to antisocial behaviour.
  • Higher antisocial rates are found in biological relatives of affected adoptees.
  • Identical twins show 60% concordance, while fraternal twins show 30%.
  • Genetic factors strongly influence antisocial personality development.
  • ADHD is associated with a higher risk of antisocial behaviour.

2. Environmental Causes

  • Dull, unstimulating environments in poor socioeconomic areas can foster antisocial behaviour.
  • Delinquent children often come from broken homes due to divorce or death.
  • Family conflict, unwed motherhood, and parental quarrels contribute significantly.
  • Lack of financial support increases the risk of delinquency.
  • These family and economic factors promote antisocial tendencies.
 

3. Psychological Causes

  • Impulsiveness, aggression, and poor self-control are key psychological traits.
  • Inability to delay gratification leads to harmful immediate actions.
  • Childhood emotional deprivation causes low self-esteem and hidden anger.
  • Lack of parental love and support worsens behaviour.
  • Weak moral development reduces the sense of right and wrong.
  • Reduced negative emotions lessen response to punishment.
CISCE: Class 12

Societal Impact

  • Persons with ASPD pose serious threats to themselves and society at large.
  • Their behaviour violates all social contracts and legal boundaries.
  • Complete lack of responsibility creates ongoing danger to communities.
  • Early identification becomes crucial for societal protection.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Anti-social Personality Disorder

  • Meaning: ASPD is a Cluster B disorder marked by rule-breaking, impulsive behaviour, manipulation, and no guilt.
  • Prevalence: Affects 5–15% of people; much higher in prisoners. In children, it appears as juvenile delinquency.
  • Causes: Strong genetic influence (low serotonin, twin studies, ADHD), along with poor family environment and emotional deprivation.
  • Impact: Individuals violate laws and social norms, posing risks to society; early identification is important.

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