Adult psychopathic offenders show an increased propensity towards violence, impulsivity, and recidivism.A subsample of youth with elevated psychopathic traits represent a particularly severe subgroup characterized by extreme behavioral problems and comparable neurocognitive deficits as their adult counterparts, including perseveration deficits.Here, we investigate response-locked event-related potential (ERP) components (the error-related negativity [ERN/Ne] related to early error-monitoring processing and the error-related positivity [Pe] involved in later error-related processing) in a sample of incarcerated juvenile Upholstered Storage Bench male offenders (n = 100) who performed a response inhibition Go/NoGo task.Psychopathic traits were assessed using the Hare Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version (PCL:YV).The ERN/Ne and Pe were analyzed with classic windowed LIQUID LANOLIN ERP components and principal component analysis (PCA).
Using linear regression analyses, PCL:YV scores were unrelated to the ERN/Ne, but were negatively related to Pe mean amplitude.Specifically, the PCL:YV Facet 4 subscale reflecting antisocial traits emerged as a significant predictor of reduced amplitude of a subcomponent underlying the Pe identified with PCA.This is the first evidence to suggest a negative relationship between adolescent psychopathy scores and Pe mean amplitude.