Yes, a psychopath can be obsessed with someone, often driven by personal desires or a need for control. Their obsession may show up as stalking (offline and online), gossiping, public image manipulation, or excessive possessiveness.
Psychopaths' stalking behaviors tend to be predatory or instrumental in nature. The victim is viewed more as a possession or target for control, retribution, or revenge, rather than as the object of a pathologically based fantasy, obsession, or infatuation.
The psychopathic personality is a particularly antisocial and predatory one. Characteristics include: A high need for control. Arrogant and confident sense of superiority and entitlement.
People with psychopathic traits typically get much greater pleasure from psychoactive substances than other people. One brain imaging study found that people who scored high on the psychopathy scale had a massive dopamine response to amphetamines–almost four times that of other participants.
Psychopathic individuals quickly engage into relationships with others but fail to authentically commit to the relationship. Thus, it seems likely that psychopathy is related to difficulties in forming and maintaining close relationships, namely attachment.
The lower on the scale a psychopath is, the more likely they are to develop some sort of love for people such as family members. Psychopaths are much less likely to develop deep bonds with others, however. Interestingly, psychopaths may still want to be loved even if they are almost incapable of truly loving another.
Results showed that persons high in psychopathy were more likely to perceive fantasizing about sexual relations with other people and expressing emotions towards a person other than the partner as infidelity.
Psychopathy is a maladaptive personality style that is marked by hypersexual activity that may put the individual or others at risk for unintended consequences such as pregnancy, STDs, pain, and emotional distress.
According to a study published in the Journal of Personality in April, it was found that psychopaths tend to be attracted to others who have psychopathic tendencies. The study titled “Do Psychopathic Birds of a Feather Flock Together?” used 696 men and women of many different backgrounds and ethnicities.
A person who is manipulative, dishonest, narcissistic, unremorseful, non-empathetic, and exploitative may be a psychopath. Criminality, promiscuity, and lack of responsibility are also common traits associated with psychopathy.
Individuals with psychopathy permanently have all of these vulnerabilities. Borderline disorder may include some psychopathic tendencies. They sometimes behave like individuals with psychopathy. They have basic trust issues and also needy and demanding characteristics.
It's also possible that some psychopaths may only be able to love themselves. They might not have the ability to feel love for anyone else. If you are close to a psychopath, it might be hard to tell what type of love they have because they are very good at manipulating things to their advantage.
Yes, research shows there are “good” psychopaths. Many people in positively heroic professions have strong psychopathic traits.
What attracts the psychopath to the empath is the sweet, kind and full of life and willingness to give qualities of an empath in which none of these traits exist in a psychopath. The psychopath's way of dealing with their childhood trauma is to suck the life from others because they themselves feel hollow inside.
Psychopaths, by definition, have problems understanding the emotions of other people, which partly explains why they are so selfish, why they so callously disregard the welfare of others, and why they commit violent crimes at up to three times the rate of other people.
Existing research evidence suggests that exposure to trauma through various abuse in childhood may play a relevant role in the development of psychopathic traits.
That means they may want to have your friends, resources and even your financial status back as their own. That said, psychopaths do appreciate their relationships in their own way. They do suffer pain, feel loneliness, have desires and feel sadness if they do not receive affection.
A review published in the European Journal of Personality sought an answer by analyzing the results of 187 studies about psychopathy and intelligence. The conclusion may be surprising: the relationship was weak, and negative. That is, people high in psychopathy tend to be slightly lower in intelligence.
To put the matter simplistically, psychopaths are born, and sociopaths are made. Both psychopathy and sociopathy, and APD generally, share features with narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), the condition exhibited by persons commonly called narcissists.
Several studies have indicated that people with psychopathic personalities tend to fear intimacy and struggle to form close emotional bonds with others. In love, this often manifests as a particular type of disjointed connection called avoidant attachment.
The study showed that psychopaths have reduced connections between the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), the part of the brain responsible for sentiments such as empathy and guilt, and the amygdala, which mediates fear and anxiety.
Most research shows that men are three to five times more likely to become psychopaths than women. However, some experts believe that the gender disparity isn't actually this large, and note that signs of a psychopath female are different and harder to detect.
Although there are many different characteristics of a psychopath to look out for, a 2015 study published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences did find that psychopaths tend to be night owls. As the study found, people with psychopathic traits seem to work better at night.
While psychopaths show a specific lack in emotions, such as anxiety, fear and sadness, they can feel other emotions, such as happiness, joy, surprise and disgust, in a similar way as most of us would.