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Joshua D Zeier

Explore the profile of Joshua D Zeier including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
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Articles 6
Citations 80
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Recent Articles
1.
Zeier J, Newman J
J Abnorm Psychol . 2013 Sep; 122(3):797-806. PMID: 24016017
As predicted by the response modulation model, psychopathic offenders are insensitive to potentially important inhibitory information when it is peripheral to their primary focus of attention. To date, the clearest...
2.
Zeier J, Baskin-Sommers A, Hiatt Racer K, Newman J
Personal Disord . 2012 Mar; 3(3):283-93. PMID: 22452754
Antisociality has been linked to a variety of executive functioning deficits, including poor cognitive control. Surprisingly, cognitive control deficits are rarely found in psychopathic individuals, despite their notoriously severe and...
3.
Wolf R, Carpenter R, Warren C, Zeier J, Baskin-Sommers A, Newman J
Neuropsychology . 2011 Oct; 26(1):102-9. PMID: 22023489
Objective: Newman and Baskin-Sommers (in press) have proposed that psychopathy reflects an attention bottleneck that interferes with processing contextual information, including the timely processing of affective and inhibitory cues that...
4.
Zeier J, Newman J
Assessment . 2011 Jul; 20(5):610-9. PMID: 21784752
Historically, psychopathy has been viewed as a clinical syndrome with a unitary etiology, assessed via clinical interview. However, factor analytic studies suggest that psychopathy may also be understood as a...
5.
Baskin-Sommers A, Zeier J, Newman J
Pers Individ Dif . 2009 Dec; 47(6):626-630. PMID: 19997525
The dual-deficit model identifies unique correlates of the two major factors associated with psychopathy (Patrick, 2007). Factor 1 is associated with deficits in amygdala-mediated emotion, while Factor 2 is related...
6.
Zeier J, Maxwell J, Newman J
J Abnorm Psychol . 2009 Aug; 118(3):554-63. PMID: 19685952
Primary psychopathic individuals are less apt to reevaluate or change their behavior in response to stimuli outside of their current focus of attention. According to the response modulation hypothesis, this...