Abstract

The aims of this study were to examine: (a) whether men with intellectual disabilities who have a history of criminal offending attend to affective pictorial stimuli in a biased manner, and (b) whether there is a relationship between an affective attentional bias and offense-supportive cognitions, empathy, and moral reasoning. Forty-six men with intellectual disabilities who had a documented history of criminal offending, and 51 men who also had intellectual disabilities, but no such history, were recruited and asked to complete a computer-based dot-probe task using affective pictorial stimuli with randomization, along with measures of distorted cognitions, empathy, and moral reasoning. Those with a history of criminal offending endorsed significantly more offense-supportive cognitions, had significantly lower general empathy, and more "mature" moral reasoning, as well as a significant attentional bias toward affective pictorial stimuli. Attentional bias significantly predicted offense-supportive cognitions, and vice versa, having controlled for offense history, and Full-Scale IQ, but this was not the case for empathy or moral reasoning. While the findings require replication, interventions that aim to modify attention bias with this population should be tested.

Highlights

  • The aims of this study were twofold: (a) to investigate whether men with intellectual disabilities who have a history of criminal offending attend to affective pictorial stimuli in a biased manner, and (b) whether there is a relationship between an affective attentional bias and offense‐supportive cognitions, empathy, and moral reasoning

  • Participants were considered eligible to take part in this study if they were (a) a man aged between 18 and 65 years, (b) who had a mild intellectual disability, (c) with the capacity to give or withhold informed consent to take part in this study study, and (d) successfully completed a practice block on the dot‐probe task defined as making no more than one error within 10 trials

  • Those without an offense history scored at the earlier Transition Stage 2(1) on Law, where decision‐making is more likely to be characterized by appealing to unilateral authority, rules, or avoidance of punishment, while those with such a history scored at Transition Stage 2(3), where decision‐making is more likely to be based upon instrumental gain

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Summary

Objectives

The aims of this study were to examine: (a) whether men with intellectual disabilities who have a history of criminal offending attend to affective pictorial stimuli in a biased manner, and (b) whether there is a relationship between an affective attentional bias and offense‐supportive cognitions, empathy, and moral reasoning. The aims of this study were twofold: (a) to investigate whether men with intellectual disabilities who have a history of criminal offending attend to affective pictorial stimuli in a biased manner, and (b) whether there is a relationship between an affective attentional bias and offense‐supportive cognitions, empathy, and moral reasoning

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