Could this have anything to do with our culture's fascination with cunning, charming, arrogant characters without much of a moral compass? (Wait, is that actually culture-specific, or are tricksters typically sympathetic?)
Given the evidence for psychopaths’ dominant response styles and differing response thresholds, increasing the salience and consistency of punishments would be important elements in these interventions.
I would say the exact opposite! Drop the punishments since those don't work well, and reward desired behaviors instead.
Holy moly, freaky theory: The old parenting style of punishing children when they misbehave and ignoring them the rest of the time produces obedient children in a population with low psychopathic traits, but children good at manipulating parents otherwise. When the population becomes more psychopathic (possibly due to this; in general I'd expect more social and reproductive success from good manipulators with little care for social norms, though impulsiveness may compensate), rewarding children for good behavior works better. Do we know where the parenting style shift came from?
How much "obedience" do you think is optimum for the individual? Even for society? If sociopaths are over-represented in leadership positions, maybe this is a feature and not a bug: the last thing you want is a principled leader when the struggle is to the death against an equally matched opponent except the opponent is less principled.
A hypothesis that could be tested is that "healthy" obedience to social norms appears as a matter of degree, that too much of it is as restrictive to what roles the individual can play in society as i...
Deviant but not necessarily diseased or dysfunctional minds can demonstrate resistance to all treatment and attempts to change their mind (think No Universally Compelling Arguments; the premier example are probably psychopaths - no drug treatments are at all useful nor are there any therapies with solid evidence of even marginal effectiveness (one widely cited chapter, “Treatment of psychopathy: A review of empirical findings”, concludes that some attempted therapies merely made them more effective manipulators! We’ll look at that later.) While some psychopath traits bear resemblance to general characteristic of the powerful, they’re still a pretty unique group and worth looking at.
The main focus of my excerpts is on whether they are treatable, their effectiveness, possible evolutionary bases, and what other issues they have or don’t have which might lead one to not simply write them off as “broken” and of no relevance to AI.
(For example, if we were to discover that psychopaths were healthy human beings who were not universally mentally retarded or ineffective in gaining wealth/power and were destructive and amoral, despite being completely human and often socialized normally, then what does this say about the fragility of human values and how likely an AI will just be nice to us?)
As usual in my 'notes' articles, the following is a series of excerpts and citations; if any interest you, leave a comment and I will try to jailbreak a copy for you or failing that, post a request on the research help page.
1 Psychopathy
The Psychopath: Emotion and the brain, Blair et al 2005:
Long section summary:
More on the ADHD correlation:
A possible overall picture:
Snakes in Suits: When Psychopaths Go To Work, Babiak & Hare 2006:
“A Genetic Factor Explains Most of the Variation in the Psychopathic Personality”, Larsson et al 2006:
Handbook of Psychopathy, ed. Christopher Patrick 2005
This is interesting since out of 500, the usual American base rates would predict not 1 but >10 psychopaths. Is this all due to the tribal and closely knit nature of more aboriginal societies, or could Eskimo society really have been selecting against psychopaths while big modern societies give scope for their talents & render them more evolutionarily fit? This may be unanswerable until the relevant genes are identified and samples of gene pools examined for the frequencies.
“Treatment of Psychopathy: A Review of Empirical Findings”, Harris & Rice 2006; from Handbook of Psychopathy 2005:
The later Handbook paper, “Risk for Criminal Recidivism: The Role of Psychopathy” (Douglas et al), also has useful critical comments on meta-analyses including the Salekin meta-analysis.
Conclusion:
The evolutionary hypothesis of psychopathy is striking (eg. it’s partially hereditable; or, sex offenders who target post-pubertal women have the highest PCL-R scores compared to any other subdivision of sex offenders), but not immediately relevant. It’s discussed a little skeptically in the chapter “Theoretical and Empirical Foundations” in the Handbook.
“Psychopathy and Personality”, Lynam & Derefinko, Handbook:
“Psychopathy and DSM-IV Psychopathology”, Handbook:
“Neuroanatomical Bases of Psychopathy”, Handbook; summary:
“Understanding Psychopathy: The Cognitive Side”
[Irrational, or just higher valuing of rewards/lower fearing of injury?]
“The”Successful" Psychopath: Adaptive and Subclinical Manifestations of Psychopathy in the General Population", Hall & Benning, Handbook
“Psychopathy and Aggression”, Porter & Woodworth; Handbook
“Toward the Future: Translating Basic Research into Prevention and Treatment Strategies”, Seto & Quinsey: