We tested the hypothesis that psychopathy is associated
with abnormal processing of semantic and affective verbal
information. In Task 1, a lexical decision task, and in
Task 2, a word identification task, participants responded
faster to concrete than to abstract words. In Task 2, psychopaths
made more errors identifying abstract words than concrete
words. In Task 3, a word identification task, participants
responded faster to positive than to negative words. In
all three tasks, nonpsychopaths showed the expected event-related
potential (ERP) differentiation between word stimuli, whereas
psychopaths did not. In each task, the ERPs of the psychopaths
included a large centrofrontal negative-going wave (N350);
this wave was absent or very small in the nonpsychopaths.
The interpretation and significance of these differences
are discussed.