The convergence of psychopathy, self-rated vulnerability, and other-rated vulnerability
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Abstract
Previous research has found that victims of crime tend to exhibit asynchronous
movement (e.g. Grayson & Stein, 1981), and the fact that victims display different body
language suggests that they may be sending inadvertent signals to their own vulnerability (e.g.
Murzynski & Degelman, 1996). Body language has also be en linked with s e l f identification as a
victim (Wheeler et aI., 2009), and self-identification has be en found to act as a proxy for more
severe victimization (Baumer, 2002) and greater fear of crime (Greenberg & Beach, 2004). The
first prediction in the present study, then, was that self-perceived vulnerability would be
correlated with body language, while number of previous victimizations mayor may not show
the same relationship. Findings from the present study indicate that self-perceived vulnerability
exhibits a positive correlation with the body language cues that approaches significance r (10) =
.45,p =.07, one-tailed. Different types of victimization, however, were not significantly
correlated with these cues. A second goal of the study was to examine the relationship between
psychopathic traits and accuracy in judgments of vulnerability. Seventy male participants rated
the vulnerability of 12 female targets filmed walking down a hallway who had provided selfratings of vulnerability. Individuals scoring higher on Factor 2 and total psychopathy were
significantly less discrepant from target self-rat~ngs of vulnerability, r (64) = - .39,p < .001; r
(64) = - .29,p >.01, respectively. The final purpose of this study was to determine which body
language cues were mos t salient to raters when making judgments of vulnerability. Participants
rated the apparent vulnerability of a target in 7 video clips portraying each body language cue in
isolation and a natural walk. Results of repeated measures analyses indicate that the videos rated
as most vulnerable to victimization were those displaying low energy and l a ck of synchrony,
followed by wide stride, short stride, and stiffknees, while the video displaying ne ck stiffness did not receive significantly different ratings from the mode l ' s natural walk. Replication with a
larger sample size is necessary to increase confidence in findings and implications.