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A small study done by researchers at the University of
Chicago shows that adolescents with “conduct disorders” – bullies in essence – may
be neurologically hardwired to enjoy inflicting pain and suffering upon others.
The study was done on sixteen 18-year-old boys, eight of
which were bullies, and eight with no history of unusual aggression. The boys
were hooked up to a functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) device and
were subjected to video clips of people suffering pain, such as a person with a
piano lead being slammed on their hands while playing.
It was noted that in the case of the aggressive youths,
seeing the material caused a surge of activity in the areas of the brain linked
with feelings of reward, more specifically the amygdala and the ventral
striatum. Unlike the control group of regular boys, the bullies showed no
activation in the areas of the brain that have to do with self-regulation and
restraint, the medial prefrontal cortex and the tempoparietal junction.
The same type of research has been used by the University of
Chicago to show that 7-to-12 year old children are naturally empathic to people
in pain.
Of the current research, scientists have said that "this
work will help us better understand ways to work with juveniles inclined to
aggression and violence."
Dr. Michael Eslea, senior lecturer in psychology at the
University of Central Lancashire, who was not involved with the study said that
while the research was interesting, it needed to be scaled up to a larger
sample.
"A better understanding of the biological basis of
these things is good to have,” he said, “but the danger is it causes people to
leap to biological solutions - drugs - rather than other behavioral solutions."
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