ABSTRACT Criminality is highly costly to victims and their relatives, but often also to offenders... more ABSTRACT Criminality is highly costly to victims and their relatives, but often also to offenders. From an evolutionary viewpoint, criminal behavior may persist despite adverse consequences by providing offenders with fitness benefits as part of a successful alternative mating strategy. Specifically, criminal behavior may have evolved as a reproductive strategy based on low parental investment reflected in low commitment in reproductive relationships. We linked data from nationwide total population registers in Sweden to test if criminality is associated with reproductive success. Further, we used several different measures related to monogamy to determine the relation between criminal behavior and alternative mating tactics. Convicted criminal offenders had more children than individuals never convicted of a criminal offense. Criminal offenders also had more reproductive partners, were less often married, more likely to get remarried if ever married, and had more often contracted a sexually transmitted disease than non-offenders. Importantly, the increased reproductive success of criminals was explained by a fertility increase from having children with several different partners. We conclude that criminality appears to be adaptive in a contemporary industrialized country, and that this association can be explained by antisocial behavior being part of an adaptive alternative reproductive strategy.
Recent reviews by prominent researchers in many fields have called for more interdisciplinary res... more Recent reviews by prominent researchers in many fields have called for more interdisciplinary research on family functioning using approaches that integrate biological and social considerations. Gangestad (Chap. 9) provides an important introduction to the field of evolutionary psychology and presents an overview of how the discipline approaches the study of familial processes. Here, we documents the ways in which three
International journal of epidemiology, Jan 8, 2015
Sexual crime is an important public health concern. The possible causes of sexual aggression, how... more Sexual crime is an important public health concern. The possible causes of sexual aggression, however, remain uncertain. We examined familial aggregation and the contribution of genetic and environmental factors to sexual crime by linking longitudinal, nationwide Swedish crime and multigenerational family registers. We included all men convicted of any sexual offence (N = 21 566), specifically rape of an adult (N = 6131) and child molestation (N = 4465), from 1973 to 2009. Sexual crime rates among fathers and brothers of sexual offenders were compared with corresponding rates in fathers and brothers of age-matched population control men without sexual crime convictions. We also modelled the relative influence of genetic and environmental factors to the liability of sexual offending. We found strong familial aggregation of sexual crime [odds ratio (OR) = 5.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 4.5-5.9] among full brothers of convicted sexual offenders. Familial aggregation was lower in f...
Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry, 1989
1. Translational control is the regulation of protein synthesis as an alteration in the efficienc... more 1. Translational control is the regulation of protein synthesis as an alteration in the efficiency of mRNA translation and is a common mechanism by which cells regulate gene expression. 2. Alternations of total protein synthesis are often the responses of cells to various stress stimuli including starvation, viral infection, and heat shock. 3. Numerous specific genes including ferritin heavy chain, tubulin, vimentin and the lck proto-oncogene have also been shown to be under translational control. 4. Unlike cultured cells or intact organisms, the investigation of translational control in the human brain requires the measurement of components of protein synthesis, especially polysomes. Therefore, we have purified and characterized polysomes from human postmortem brain tissues and compared them to polysomes purified from the adult rat brain. 5. The yield (as A260 units per gram brain tissue), size (as number of ribosomes per message), translational efficiency (as amount protein synthe...
Background. Possible age-related differences in risk of completed suicide following non-fatal sel... more Background. Possible age-related differences in risk of completed suicide following non-fatal self-harm remain unexplored. We examined associations between self-harm and completed suicide across age groups of self-harming patients, and whether these associations varied by violent index method, presence of mental disorder, and repeated self-harm. Method. The design was a cohort study with linked national registers in Sweden. The study population comprised individuals aged ⩾10 years hospitalized during 1990-1999 due to non-fatal self-harm (n = 53 843; 58% females) who were followed for 9-19 years. We computed hazard ratios (HRs) across age groups (age at index self-harm episode), with time to completed suicide as outcome. Results. The 1-year HR for suicide among younger males (10-19 years) was 14.6 [95% confidence interval (CI) 4.1-51.9] for violent method and 8.4 (95% CI 1.8-40.0) for mental disorder. By contrast, none of the three potential risk factors increased the 1-year risks in...
Child maltreatment is associated with adult sexually coercive behavior. The association may be ca... more Child maltreatment is associated with adult sexually coercive behavior. The association may be causal or confounders that increase the risk of both childhood victimization and sexually coercive behavior might explain the observed links. We examined if childhood maltreatment was related to sexual coercion independently of familial (genetic or common family environment) risk factors, thereby addressing potential causality. Participants were 6,255 18 to 33-year-old twins from the Finnish population-based study "Genetics of Sex and Aggression" who responded to self-report questionnaires of child maltreatment and sexually coercive behavior. We used generalized estimating equations to elucidate risk of sexual coercion in maltreated compared to unrelated, non-maltreated individuals. To adjust for unmeasured familial factors, we used the co-twin control method and compared sexual coercion risk within maltreatment-discordant twin pairs. Further, we examined possible differential ef...
Associations between child maltreatment and adult violence, often termed the 'cycle of violen... more Associations between child maltreatment and adult violence, often termed the 'cycle of violence', are well documented. However, the nature of such links after appropriate control for confounding remains uncertain. We aimed to determine whether child maltreatment causes adult violent offending or whether suggested links are due to genetic or family environment confounding. A total of 18 083 20- to 47-year-old twins from the Swedish population-based Study of Twin Adults: Genes and Environment (STAGE) participated. We linked information on self-reported child maltreatment with national register data on convictions for adult crime. We used a case-control design to elucidate associations among unrelated individuals and also conducted within-discordant twin pair analyses to estimate the influence of familial confounding on this association. The odds ratio (OR), adjusted for age, sex and education, for violent offending in maltreated children grown up versus unrelated controls was ...
Jama-journal of The American Medical Association, 2009
... Glen Smith, MBBS glsmith{at}nsccahs.health.nsw.gov.auNorthern Sydney Central Coast Area Healt... more ... Glen Smith, MBBS glsmith{at}nsccahs.health.nsw.gov.auNorthern Sydney Central Coast Area Health ServiceSydney, Australia; Matthew Large, MBBS; ... Letters Section Editor: Robert M. Golub, MD, Senior Editor. References. ...
ABSTRACT Criminality is highly costly to victims and their relatives, but often also to offenders... more ABSTRACT Criminality is highly costly to victims and their relatives, but often also to offenders. From an evolutionary viewpoint, criminal behavior may persist despite adverse consequences by providing offenders with fitness benefits as part of a successful alternative mating strategy. Specifically, criminal behavior may have evolved as a reproductive strategy based on low parental investment reflected in low commitment in reproductive relationships. We linked data from nationwide total population registers in Sweden to test if criminality is associated with reproductive success. Further, we used several different measures related to monogamy to determine the relation between criminal behavior and alternative mating tactics. Convicted criminal offenders had more children than individuals never convicted of a criminal offense. Criminal offenders also had more reproductive partners, were less often married, more likely to get remarried if ever married, and had more often contracted a sexually transmitted disease than non-offenders. Importantly, the increased reproductive success of criminals was explained by a fertility increase from having children with several different partners. We conclude that criminality appears to be adaptive in a contemporary industrialized country, and that this association can be explained by antisocial behavior being part of an adaptive alternative reproductive strategy.
Recent reviews by prominent researchers in many fields have called for more interdisciplinary res... more Recent reviews by prominent researchers in many fields have called for more interdisciplinary research on family functioning using approaches that integrate biological and social considerations. Gangestad (Chap. 9) provides an important introduction to the field of evolutionary psychology and presents an overview of how the discipline approaches the study of familial processes. Here, we documents the ways in which three
International journal of epidemiology, Jan 8, 2015
Sexual crime is an important public health concern. The possible causes of sexual aggression, how... more Sexual crime is an important public health concern. The possible causes of sexual aggression, however, remain uncertain. We examined familial aggregation and the contribution of genetic and environmental factors to sexual crime by linking longitudinal, nationwide Swedish crime and multigenerational family registers. We included all men convicted of any sexual offence (N = 21 566), specifically rape of an adult (N = 6131) and child molestation (N = 4465), from 1973 to 2009. Sexual crime rates among fathers and brothers of sexual offenders were compared with corresponding rates in fathers and brothers of age-matched population control men without sexual crime convictions. We also modelled the relative influence of genetic and environmental factors to the liability of sexual offending. We found strong familial aggregation of sexual crime [odds ratio (OR) = 5.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 4.5-5.9] among full brothers of convicted sexual offenders. Familial aggregation was lower in f...
Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry, 1989
1. Translational control is the regulation of protein synthesis as an alteration in the efficienc... more 1. Translational control is the regulation of protein synthesis as an alteration in the efficiency of mRNA translation and is a common mechanism by which cells regulate gene expression. 2. Alternations of total protein synthesis are often the responses of cells to various stress stimuli including starvation, viral infection, and heat shock. 3. Numerous specific genes including ferritin heavy chain, tubulin, vimentin and the lck proto-oncogene have also been shown to be under translational control. 4. Unlike cultured cells or intact organisms, the investigation of translational control in the human brain requires the measurement of components of protein synthesis, especially polysomes. Therefore, we have purified and characterized polysomes from human postmortem brain tissues and compared them to polysomes purified from the adult rat brain. 5. The yield (as A260 units per gram brain tissue), size (as number of ribosomes per message), translational efficiency (as amount protein synthe...
Background. Possible age-related differences in risk of completed suicide following non-fatal sel... more Background. Possible age-related differences in risk of completed suicide following non-fatal self-harm remain unexplored. We examined associations between self-harm and completed suicide across age groups of self-harming patients, and whether these associations varied by violent index method, presence of mental disorder, and repeated self-harm. Method. The design was a cohort study with linked national registers in Sweden. The study population comprised individuals aged ⩾10 years hospitalized during 1990-1999 due to non-fatal self-harm (n = 53 843; 58% females) who were followed for 9-19 years. We computed hazard ratios (HRs) across age groups (age at index self-harm episode), with time to completed suicide as outcome. Results. The 1-year HR for suicide among younger males (10-19 years) was 14.6 [95% confidence interval (CI) 4.1-51.9] for violent method and 8.4 (95% CI 1.8-40.0) for mental disorder. By contrast, none of the three potential risk factors increased the 1-year risks in...
Child maltreatment is associated with adult sexually coercive behavior. The association may be ca... more Child maltreatment is associated with adult sexually coercive behavior. The association may be causal or confounders that increase the risk of both childhood victimization and sexually coercive behavior might explain the observed links. We examined if childhood maltreatment was related to sexual coercion independently of familial (genetic or common family environment) risk factors, thereby addressing potential causality. Participants were 6,255 18 to 33-year-old twins from the Finnish population-based study "Genetics of Sex and Aggression" who responded to self-report questionnaires of child maltreatment and sexually coercive behavior. We used generalized estimating equations to elucidate risk of sexual coercion in maltreated compared to unrelated, non-maltreated individuals. To adjust for unmeasured familial factors, we used the co-twin control method and compared sexual coercion risk within maltreatment-discordant twin pairs. Further, we examined possible differential ef...
Associations between child maltreatment and adult violence, often termed the 'cycle of violen... more Associations between child maltreatment and adult violence, often termed the 'cycle of violence', are well documented. However, the nature of such links after appropriate control for confounding remains uncertain. We aimed to determine whether child maltreatment causes adult violent offending or whether suggested links are due to genetic or family environment confounding. A total of 18 083 20- to 47-year-old twins from the Swedish population-based Study of Twin Adults: Genes and Environment (STAGE) participated. We linked information on self-reported child maltreatment with national register data on convictions for adult crime. We used a case-control design to elucidate associations among unrelated individuals and also conducted within-discordant twin pair analyses to estimate the influence of familial confounding on this association. The odds ratio (OR), adjusted for age, sex and education, for violent offending in maltreated children grown up versus unrelated controls was ...
Jama-journal of The American Medical Association, 2009
... Glen Smith, MBBS glsmith{at}nsccahs.health.nsw.gov.auNorthern Sydney Central Coast Area Healt... more ... Glen Smith, MBBS glsmith{at}nsccahs.health.nsw.gov.auNorthern Sydney Central Coast Area Health ServiceSydney, Australia; Matthew Large, MBBS; ... Letters Section Editor: Robert M. Golub, MD, Senior Editor. References. ...
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