You are on page 1of 52

If you have issues viewing or accessing this file contact us at NCJRS.gov.

The Etiology of Criminality:


Nonbehavioral Science Perspectives
A Definitive Bibliography

compiled by
James R. Bmnt!ey
Senior Document Evaluator

Marjorie Kravitz
Supervising Editor

National Criminal Justice Reference Service

June 1979

U. S. Department of Justice
Law Enforc'ement Assistance Administration
NaUonallnstltute of LSlw Enforcement and Criminal Justice

I
r

Law Enforcement Assistance Administration


Henry S. Dogin, Administrator
Homer F. Broome, Jr., Deputy Administrator for Administration

National Institute of Law Enforcement


and Criminal Justice
Harry M. Bratt, Acting Director

I
.
Got a Moment?
We'd like to know what you think of the NCJRS Definitive
Bibliography series.
A reader's questionnaire is printed on the last page of
this publication. The postage is prepaid and the question-
nalre is designed to facilitate your response. Won't you take
a few moments to complete It? Your answers will help
NCJRS provide you with more useful publications. Thank
you for your cooperation.

A limited number of paper and microfiche copies of this publication


are distributed by the Nllllonal Criminal Justice Reference Service.
When roquestlng this document. please use the following Identifi-
cation number: NCJ 60117.

For snlo. by tho. Supo.dnto.lldol\t of DOCl!IIIClIls, U,S. Ullvol'nmont l'rlnUns Offico


Woshlngton, D.O. 2(H02
Slack Numbor 027-()()(H)()S61H}
.---------.--~ .-

Table of Contents

Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. v
How To Obtain These Documents ............................................. vII
Bibliography. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1
Subject Index................................................................ 29
Author Index ................................................................33

Reader Survey

iii
Introduction

Over the centuries people have sought to understand the forces which cause
some members of society to commit criminal acts. Thoories of criminality have
evolved as new ideas have coursed through society, some attaining preeminence for
a time before being subsumed under a new wave of thought. Each of these, such as
the classical school, which held free will paramount, and the positivist school, which
held that criminal behavior was biologically determined, has some contribution to
make toward the study of crime; yet none of them, when taken in Isolation, adequately
explains the phenomenon of crime.
,
Early theories focused on biological determinants, holding that criminal be-
havior was inherited or was a manifestation of an evolutionary throwback, or atavism.
As the classical school gave way to positivism, so positivism gradually eroded as the
dominant school of criminology under the onslaught of psychology and sociology.
In recent years the fOGUS has been on sociological and psychological correlates
of crime-poverty, unemployment, discrimination, poor family life, and early child-
hood deprivation are some of the factors that have been associated with criminality.
Although the literature of the social sciences makes an important contribution'
to our understanding of criminality, it does not hold all the answers. Current research
has pointed to some possible deten11inants of criminal behavior In the organism it-
self. It is appropriate to examine some of the work of nutritionists, doctors, biologists
and others from the physical sciences as we seek a new, holistic synthesis concerning
crlm inality.
Cesare Lombroso's I'uomo delinquente (1876) is generally considered the
beginning of the study of biological factors on criminality, although physiognomy,
the study of facial features, and phrenology, the study of external cranial structure,
had been known as early as the time of Aristotle and had evolved into recognized
disciplines by the time Lavater's Physiognomical Fragments (1nS) was published.
The biological model of criminality focuses on biological, somatological, rnd an-
thropological factors as they Influence criminal behavior. This orientation poGits the
criminal as biologically different from other humans. Lombroso's j'atavistic crimlnal/'
Goring's "crlmlnal,dlathesis," and Sheldon's $omatotypes are examples, although
now largely discredited.
This bibliography is a compilation of recent literature in the NCJRS collection
on biological Influences on criminal behavior. The earliest citations date from 1955,
shortly before the surge of growth of criminology during the sixties. It does not in-
clude the classical works, such as those of Lombroso, Lavater, Ferri, Goddard,
Sheldon, or Hooten. Nor are the earlier works of modern pioneers, such as K. O.
Christiansen or S. H. Shah, Included. The rich European literature concerning blo..
logical Influences and criminal behavior Is also somewhat underrepresented.
This bibliography Is not Intended to revive the nature-nllrture controversy nor
to advocate biological Influences at the expense of su~lal factors. Rather, these
selections may be viewed as representative of a biological approach to the study of
criminality .

v
Many of the factors which may contribute to the development of criminal
behavior, but which rarely, jf ever, appear in the social science literature will be re-
viewed here. The documents have, as their central focus, a concern with various
biological phenomena hypothesized as being associated with criminal behavio
Glaser (1974) provided an apt explanation of how biological will be used in the pres-
ent context: "By biological we refer to a broad range of processes and conditions
that typically are considered as belonging to or 'characteristic of' the organism,
rather than its 'present' environment." Whereas much of the criminological literature
describes the various influenc9s of the social environment on the opportunity for and
disposition toward crime, this bibliography provides references to biological, genetic,
and medical stUdies of the causes of criminal behavior. A brief overview of the types
of material cited follows.

The influence of various epileptic disorders, as they relate to criminal behavior,


is presented, as are studies of electroencephalogram abnormalities. Learning dis-
abilities, minimal brain dysfunctions, and visual problems among delinquents have
also recently been examined. Neurological abnormalities. discrders of the brain or
disturbances in its chemical balance. such as hyperkinesis, may influence criminal-
ity. Genetic research concerning chromosomal abnormalities, such as 47, XXV
. (Klinefelter's syndrome) producing extreme tallness and distinct EEG pattern, ex-
amines the possibility of inheritable aspects of criminality. The work of K. O. Christian-
sen and his cohort studies of Danish twins is a prime example of the research on
genetic influences. Disorders in the endocrine system, the system of glands regulat-
ing internal functions, have been associated with criminal behavior, often with re-
gard to sexual offenders. Limbic system disorders, affected by sugar diabetes and
hypoglycemia (low blood sugar), have been associated with ~iolent, sometimes
criminal, behavior. Psychophysiological indices related to emotional response may
also playa role. Galvanic skin response may be indicative of the aptitude for learning
inhibiting behavior; biochemical balances, such as levels of adrenaline and nor-
adrenaline, are associated with aggression. Some of the literature from psychopathy
is relevant in this regard.

Over a decade ago former President Lyndon Johnson's Commission on Law


En'orcement and the Administration of Justice found the American criminal justice
system a fragmented hodgepodge of agencies pursuing uncoordinated strategies to
control crime. That Commission recommended a systems approach to the problem
of crime control. By recognizing that the activities of one component of the system
can impact on another- increased arrests by police yield both heavier court dockets
and more people being processed into the correctional system-we have improved
our reactions to crime. However a holistic approach is also necessary to understand
the variety of factors which may cause or predispose an individual to commit criminal
acts. Both social and biological forces shape the Individual; it is only by understand-
ing the totality of influences on the individual that we may begin to construct proactive
measures to render our responses more effective.

The citations in this bibliography have been selected from the data base of the
National Criminal Justice Reference Service and 'are arranged in alphabetical order
by title; author and subject Indexes are appended tv assist researchers. The NCJ
accession numbe~, blbllography information, availability sources, annotations, and
Indexes are printed directly from the computerized data base.

vi

~,~ ;~ ..
--- ----~~___c~------

How To Obtain These Documents

The documents in this bibliography are part of the National Criminal Justice ,"
Reference Service (NCJRS) collection and are available to the public in the NCJRS
Reading Room on weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. The NCJRS Reading Room is
located in Suite 211, 1015 20th Street, NW., Washington, D. C. Many of the documents
may also be found in public and organizational libraries.

For researchers who prefer to obtain personal copies, a sales source is


identified whenever possible. Document availability changes over time and NCJRS
cannot guarantee continued availability from publishers and distributors.

Documents From GPO


The letters GPO after a citation indicate that copies may be purchased from the
Government Printing Office. Inquiries about availability and cost should include
stock number and title and be addressed to:
Superintendent of Documents
U. S. Government Printing Office
Washington, DC 20402

. Documents From NTIS


The letters NTIS after a citation indicate that copies may be purchased from the
National Technical Information Service. Inquiries about availability and cost should
include publication number and title and be addressed to: "
National Technical Information Service
5285 Port Royal Road
Springfield, VA 22161

Microfiche From NCJRS


The desig,ation "NCJRS Microfiche Program" indicates thaf a free microfiche
copy of the document is available from NCJRS. Microfiche is a 4 x 6 inch sheet of film
that contains the reduced images of up to 98 pages of text. Because the image is re-
duced 24 times, a microfiche reader (available at most public and academic libraries)
is essential to read microfiche documents. Requests for microfiche should include
the title and NCJ number and be addressed to:
NCJRS Microfiche Program
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20850

Loan Documents From NCJRS


Most of these documents may be borrowed from the National Criminal Justice
Reference Service on interlibrary loan, Documents are not loaned directly to individ-
uals. To borrow documents from NCJRS, specify the title and NCJ number and ask
your librarian to submit a standard interlibrary loan form to:
NCJRS Document Loan Program
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20850

vii

;,'
, /e,I" .; ... ,',t.
- --~-.-----...,.------------~--~-----.

The Etiology of Criminality:


Nonbehavioral Science Perspectives

1. ACADEMIC, PERCEPTUAL, AND VISUAL LEVELS OF DI!· 8. ASSESSMENT OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR AND PLASMA
TAiNED JUVENILES (FROM ECOLOGICoBIOCH!aMICAL Ap· TESTOSTERONE IN A YOUNG CRIMINAL POPULAnON.
PROACH1!8 TO TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND By L E. KREUZ and R. M•• ROSE. HARPER AND ROW,
CRIIlItW.8, 11.,., BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN-SEE PUBLISHER, INC MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, 2350 VIRGINIA
NCJ-1i0444). By J. B. BLANCHARD and F. MANNARINO. AVENUE, HAGERSTOWN MD 21740. PSYCHOSOMATIC
VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET, MEDICINE, V 34, N 4 (JULY/AUGUST 1972), P 321·332.
NEW YORK NY 10001. 11 p. 1978. NCJ·60457 NCJ.571H
INTENSIVE EVALUATION OF 10 BOYS ADMITIED TO THE POMPA· CORRELATIONS AMONG PLASMA TESTOSTERONE (MALE SEX
NO, flORIDA, JUVENILE DETENTION CENTER SHOWED THAT ALL HORMO~E) LEVELS, FIGHTING AND VERBAL AGGRESSION IN
10 SUFFERED FROM LEARNING DISABILmES (BY THE STATE'S PRISON, PAST CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TEST'
DeFINmON) AND THAT 7 HAD MAJOR VISION IMPAIRMENT. SCORES ARE EXPLORED IN A STUDY OF 21 YOUNG MALE IN·
MATES.
2. ACGUIIITIOH AND GENERALIZATION OF A
CONDmONED-FEAR RESPONSE IN PSYCHOPATHIC AND
NONPlYCHOPATHIC CRIMINALS. By R. D. HARE. 7. ATTEMPT TO IDENTIFY PRISONERS WITH AN XVY CHRO-
JOURNAL PRESS, BOX 543, 2 COMMERCIAL STREET, PRO· MOSOME COMPLEMENT BY PSYCHIATRIC AND PSYCHO-
VINCETOWN MA 02657. JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, LOGICAL MEANS. By A. FALEK, R. CRADDlCK, and J.
V 59.(1965), P 387-370. NCJ·55858 COLLUM. WILLIAMS AND WILKINS COMPANY, 428 EAST
PRESTON STREET, BALTIMORE MD 21202. JOURNAL OF
THIS STUDY TESTS THE HYPOTHESIS THAT NOT ONLY DO PSY· NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE, V 150, N 3 (MARCH
CHOPATHS DEVELOP CONDmONED-FEAR RESPONSES SLOWLY, 1970), P 165~170. NCJ.57104
BUT THAT SUCH RESPONSES, ONCE ACQUIRED, ARE GENERAL·
A CHROMOSOME SURVEY OF INMATES WHOSE HEIGHT AND PSY·
IZED LESS BY PSYCHOPATHIC THAN BY NONPSYCHOPATHIC PER·
SONS. . CHOLOGICAL OR PSYCHIATRIC ASSESSMENT SUGGESTED THE
PRESENCE OF THE XYV CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITY IS RE·
3. ADAPTIVE AND LEARNING SKILLS IN JUVENILE ~":LlN· PORTED.
QUENTI-A NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS. By A.
BERMAN and A. W. SIEGAL PROFESSIONAL PRESS 8. AUTONOMIC REACTIVITY 'ro SENSORY STiMliLAnCH IN
INC, 101 EAST ONTARIO STREET, CHICAGO IL 60611. PSYCHOPATHIC, NEUROnC, AND NORMA'- JUVENILE DE-
JOURNAL OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, V 9, N 9 (NOVEM· LINQU~NTS. By T. D. BORKOVEC, AMERICAN PSY·
I3ER 1978), P 583·5110. NCJ·55811 CHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, ·1200 17TH STREET, NW,
THIS STUDY JNVI=STIGATES THE POSSIBILITIES FOR A NEUROp· WASHINGTON DC 20036; THOMAS D BORKOVEC UNI·
SYCHot..OGICAL APPROACH (TEACHING ADAPTIVE AND LEARNING VERSITY OF IOWA DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY, IOWA
CITY IA 52240. JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLlNI·
SKILl.S) TO JUVENILE DELINQUENCY USING 45 ADJUDICATED DE· CAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 35, N 2 (1970), P 217·222.
L1NQUENT BOYS AND 45 CONTROL SUBJECTS. NCJ.54505
4. AGGRESIION. AND THE EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALO· THIS STUDY EXAMINES THE HYPOTHESIS THAT PSYCHOPATHS
GMIi)-A QUANTITAnVE ANALYSIS. By R. BLACK· SHOW U:SS REACTIVITY AND/OR MORE RAPID ADAPTATION TO
BURtt. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 1200 SENSORY IMPUTS THAN DELINQUENTS,. NEUROTICS, AND
17TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20036. JOURNAL NORMAL PERSONS. .
OFABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 84, N 4 (AUGUST 1975),
P 358-3t!5. NCJ·574118 SUpplemental Hotn: PAPER BASED ON MASTER'S THESIS AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS.
THIS STUDY TESTS THE HYPOTHESIS THAT AGGRESSIVE OF·
FENDERS HAVE A GREATER AMOUNT OF THETA ACTIVITY IN SponlOring Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
THEIR ELECi'ROCORl1CAL RHYTHMS THAN NONAGGRESSIVE OF· AND WELFARE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE, f:i6OO FISHER.S LANE,
ROCKVILLE MD 20952. .
FENDERS AND ARE MOFIE CORTICALLY REACTIVE.

5. ANIMAL GENETICS AND AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR (FROM II. BEHAVIOR DISORDERS AND PATTERN OF CRIME AMONG
HUMAN AGMUIION AND DANGEROUSNESS 1178, BY D XVY MALES IDENTIFIED AT A MAXIMUM SECURITY tfOSo
LAlEfIQI·ALTMEJD IY
D LABERGE·ALTMEJD .... SEE PITAL. By W. H. PRICE a"d P. B; WHATMORE.S
NCJ-11.....". . Iy n. MONROE.
INSTITUT PHILIPPE PINEL CHAND AND COMPANY, H 0 RAM NAGAR, NEW DELHI·55,
INDIA. BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, V' 1, N 639
DE MONTREAL, 12,333 BOULEVARO, MONTREAL, QUEBEC
478, CAHAJ)'" 7 p. 1978. canada. NCJ·57485 (MARCH 1967), P 533·536. NCJ.I7oea·
STUDIES AfIE biSCUSSED WHICH SUPPORT THE CONCEPT THAT THE PERSONALITIES, CRIMINAL HISTORIES, AND SOOlAL BACK.
AGGAI!8SI()N CAN BE GeNETlCALLV. INHERITED BY BOTH ANI· GROUNDS OF NINE CHROMOSOMALLY ABNORMAL PATIENTS IN A
MALSAND HUMANS, IN SPITE oF THE FACT THAT Et4VIRONMENT SCOttiSH PSYCHIATRIC INSTITUTION ARE COMPARED WITH
. ..
HAS A GReAT EFFECT ~ BEH~VltJFI.
. . THOSE OF CHROMOSOMALLY NORMAL CONTFJOLS.

1.

.::"
,.
~' .

BEHAVIOR The Etiology

10. BEHAVIOR DISORDERS OF CHILDHOOD AND THE ELEC- HABILITATION, V 1, N 1 (FALL 1976), P 115-123.
TROENCEPHALOGRAM. By J. R. STEVENS, K. SACH- tiCJ.40151
DEV, end V. MILSTEIN. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCI· THIS PAPER DISCUSSES RECENT RESEARCH FINDINGS THA
ATION, 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET. CHICAGO IL SUGGEST THAT DELINQUENCY AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR M
00610. ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, V 18 (FEBRUARY WELL HAVE CAUSES RELATED TO BIOCHEMICAL DEFICIE S
1988), P 180-177. N'*1I5251
ANDIOR DEPENDENCIES.
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG). FAMILY BACKGROUND. NEU·
ROLOGICAL, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL DATA ARE COMPARED FOR 97 17. BIOCHEMICAL DIAGNOSIS FOR DEUNQUENf HAVIOR
CHILDREN EXHIBITING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR AND MATCHED CON- (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO
TROLS. TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS,: 11.,., BY
LEONARD J HIPPCHEN SEE NCJo5OofM). By P. L
11. BEtfAVIOR OF .HYPERSEXUAL DEUNQUENT GIRLS. By BONNET and C. C. PFEIFFER. VAN NOSTRAND REIN·
J. D. GOODMAN. AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCI· HOLD, 450 WEST S3RD STREET, NEW YORK NY 10001.
AlION. 1700 18TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20009, 23 p. '1978. NCJ.50453
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY. V 133, N 6 (JUNE DIAGNOSTIC METHODS TO EVALUATE AND TREAT BIOCHEMICAL
1976), P 662-668. NCJ-57102 IMBALANCES ASSOCIATED WITH BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS ARE
CASE STUDIES OF SEVEN FEMALE JUVENILES WITH HISTORIES REVIEWED. BOTH PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING ARE
OF HYPERSEXUAL BEHAVIOR ASSOCIATED WITH DELINQUENCY, RECOMMENDED.
AGGRESSION, AND·· HYPOMANIA (LOW.INTENSITY MANIA), ARE
PRESENTED. 18. BIOCHEMISTRY OF STRESS REACTIONS AND CRIME.
SUpplemtntal Notts: REVISED VERSION OF A PAPER PRESENTED By L J.HIPPCHEN. 38 p. 1978. NCJ.5Z027
AT THE 128TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHIAT· THiS PAPER REVIEWS RESEARCH AND THEORY RELATING BIO-
RIC ASSOCIATION, ANAHEIM (CA,). MAY 5-9, 1975. CHEMICAL STRESS FACTORS TO ANTISOCIAL FORMS OF BEHAV·
lOR IN CHILDREN AND DELINQUENCY IN JUVENILES. A BIOGRA·
12. BEHAVIORAL IMPUCATIONS OF THE HUMAN XYV GENO- PHY IS INCLUDED.
TYPE. By E. B. HOOK. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR SUpp/ttmental Notts: PREPARED FOR THE SYMPOSIUM ON
THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE. 1515 MASSACHUSmS STRESS AND CRIME, DECEMBER 1978, WASHINGTON DC-CON-
AVENUE, NW. WASHINGTON DC 20005. SCIENCE, V DUOTED BY THE MITRE CORPORATION FOR THE NATIONAL INSTI·
179, N 4069 (JANUARY 12, 1973), P 139-150. TUTE OF LAW ENFORCEMENT AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE.
NCJ-078D6 Availability: NCJRS MIcr,.tOFICHE PROGRAM.
A REVIEW OF MAJOR QUESTIONS AND THEORIES CONCERNING
THE PRESENCE OF THE XYV CHROMOSOME PATIERN IN THE 11. BIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL FACTORS IN
HUMAN MALE. CRIMINAUTY (FROM HANDBOOK OF CRIMINOLOGY,
1174, BY DANIEL GLASER SEE NcJ-11488). 3y s. A-
'''. BEHAVIORAL OPTOMETRIC VISION-A PRACTICAL AND SHAH and L H. ROTH. RAND MCNALLY AND COMPANY.
COMPf1EHENSIVIE PLAN FOR JUVENILE DEUNOUENCY BOX 7600, CHICAGO IL 60680. 73 p. 1974.
CONTROL By D. DZIK. PROFESSIONAL PRESS INC, • NCJo4MM
101 EASf ONTARIO STREET, CHICAGO IL 60611. OPTO- THEORY AND RESEARCH ON DIRECT AND INDIRECT LINKS BE·
METRIC WEEKLY, (JANUARY 1968), P 23-30. TWEEN BIOLOGICAL VARIABLES AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR ARE
NCJ-54021 REVIEWED, AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PREVENTION ARE DIS-
A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PROBLEM VISION AND JUVENILE DE· CUSSED. .
LINQUENCY IS DESCRIBED USING RESULTS OF A STUDY IN HAM·
ILTON COUNTY TENN" AND A PROGRAM FOR SCREENING AND 20. BIOLOGICAL BASES OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR WITH SPECIF-
EXAMINING STUDENTS FOR VISION PROBLEMS IS PROPOSED. IC REFERENCE TO VIOLENT BEHAYIOR(FROIII CRIMES
OF VIOLENCE, 1IM1D-SEE NCJ.OO571). By Go Eo
14. BIQ.I,lOClAL CORRELATES OF TWO TYPES OF MCCLEARN. NATIONAL COMMISSiON ON THE CAUSES
ANTl-8OCIAL SOCIOPATHS. By H. !. ALLEN. 232 p. & PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE. 38 p. 1969.
• 1970. NCJ.581183 NC.H5I04
AN INTEGRt\TED FRAME OF REFERENCE ·,S PROVIDEO TO HELP
FORVY·THREE INMATES OF THE OHIO PENITENTIARY WERE
STUDIED TO CONFIRM THAT ANnSOCIAL SOCIOPATHS SHOW HY· ASSESS AVAIL4BLE INFORMATION ON THE BIOLOGICAL BASES
PERACTIVITY TO EPINEPHRINE AND THAT THE DRUG FACILI· AND CONSEQUENCES OF AGGRESSIVE AND VIOLENT BEHAVIOR.
TATES LEARNING AS MEASURED BY THEIR ABILITY oro SOLVE A
21. BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ON VIOLENT BEHAVIOR (FROM
MAZE. ECOLOGIc-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO mEATMEHT
SUppJslMntal Notea: SPECIAL PRICES AVAILABLE FOR ACADEMIC OF DEUNOUENTS AND CRIMINALS, "78, BY LEONARD J
INSTITUTIONS OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY-DOCTORAL DISSERTA· HIPPCHEN SEE N~). By J. A. YARVURA-1·OBlM.
TION. VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET.
Avalllblllty: UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS. 300 NORTH ZEEB ROAD. NEW YORK NY 10001. 15 p. 1978. NCJ.S0451
ANN ARBOR MI "8106. Stock Order No. 70-13.971. (Microfiche) AN EXTENSIVE REVIEW OF RESEARCH CONCERNING THE BIO-
LOGICAL ASPECTS OF VIOLENT BEHAVIOR IS GIVEN. IT IS ~.
'. 15, DIQ.SOCIAL THEORY OF THE L£ARNIHG OF CLUDED THAT COURTS NEED TO DIFFERENTIATE BETWEEN OF·
LAW-ABIDING IEHAVIOR. By S. A. MEDNICK. INTeR· FENDERS WHO SUFFER FROM BIOLOGICAL PROBLEMS AND
NATION"L CENTRE FOR BIOLOGICAL AND THOSE WHO DO NOT.
• MEDlc:o.FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY. POBOX 22215, SAO
PAULO, BRAZIL 17 p. 1975. Brazil. NCJ.3t1172 22. BIOLOGY OF INDIVIDUAL VIOLENCE-AM OVERVIEW
PAPER EXAMINES THI; THEORY THAT THERE IS A GI;NETIC (FROM CRIMES OF VIOLENCE; 116~-S!E NCJ.OOI71).
FACTc;lR I~' 'f:iE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMINALITY AND PSYCHOPATHY. By F. ERVIN. NATIONAL COMMISSION ON THE CAUSES
~ar::;'1 Hotts: PROCEEDINGS OF TtlE2ND INTERNATIONAL
& PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE. 20 p. 1969. .
SYMPpSIUM'Or'ICRIMINOLOGV-UNIFIED CRIMINOLOGY, PART 1. NCJ.G5I05
THIS OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH ON THE BIOLOGY OF INDIVIDUAL
18. IDlOCHElIIlCAL ApPROACHES TO OFFENDER REHABILITA- VIOLENCE OUTLINES WHAT IS KNOWI~ AND WHAT REMAINS TO
TION. :tIy I.. J. HIPPCHEN. HAWORTH PRESS. 149 BE DISCOVERED REGARDING THE EFFEct OF BRAIN DYSFUNC-
FIFTH AVENUE,' NEW YORI< NY 10010. OFFENDER RE· TION, GENETICS. BRAIN DISEASE. AND DRuGS ON AGGRESSION.

• 'f
, '/

of' .Cdmlnallty CAN

23. BIOPSYCttlC fACTORS AND JUVENIL.E DEUNQUENCY; COUNTY COURTHOUSE, MORRISTOWN NJ .07960. 20 p. I:
. (FACTEURS BIOPSYCHIQUES ET LA DEUNQUAHCE JUVE- 1973. MCJ-12171
NILE.) By FIRKOWSKA-MANKIEWICZ. CENTRE DE
FORMATION ET DE RECHERCHE DE L'EDUCATION SUR- RESULTS OF SLOOD TESTING OF MORfllS COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.
VEILLEE, 54, RUE DE GARCHES, VAUCRESSON. AN- JAIL INMATES FOR POSSlaLE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN sPER·
NALES DE VAUCRESSON, N 9 (1971), P 113-125. (In MINE, SPERMIDINE, AND HISTAMINE LEVELS AND GRANDIOSITY.
Ffflnch) NCJ·29715 SponNffng Agency: NEW JERSEY STATE LAw ENFORCEMENT
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS CORRELATING DATA ON SOCIAL BACK· PLANNING AGENCY, 3535 QUAKER BRIDGE ROAD, TRENTON NJ
GROUND,· BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL DISTURBANCES, AND JUVENILE 08625.
DELINQUENCY IN GROUPS OF DELINQUENTS AND
NON-DELINQUENTS IN POLAND. 29. BRAIN DYSFUNCTIO~ IN AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS. By
R. R. MONROE. HEATH LEXINGTON BOOKS, 125 SPRING
24. IBIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. S. A. MED- STREET, LEXINGTON MA 02173. 238 p. 1978.
NICK and K; O. CHRISTIANSEN, Ed.. GARDNER PRESS, NCJ.5311t
INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW YORK NY 10003. NINETY-THREE RECIDIVIST AGGRESSORS CONFINED TO MARY·
31110. p. '977. \ NCJ-47285 LAND'S PATUXENT INSTITUTION WERE STUDIED TO TEST THE VA~
THE INTERACTION OF BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL FORCES IN PRO- LIDITY OF A TWO·CIIMENS~ONAL METHOD FOR CLASSIFYING
DUCING CRIMINALITY IS CONSIOERED IN THIS ANTHOLOGY OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. .
DISCUSSIONS DERIVED FROM RESEARCH STUDIES. Availability: HEATH LEXINGTON BOOKS, 125 SPRING STREET, LEX-
~ng Agenclea: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH. EDUCATION. INGTON MA 02173.
AND WELFARE NATIONAL INST OF MENiAL HEALTH CENTER FOR
STUDIES OF CRIME AND DELINQUENCY, WASHINGTON, DC 20203; 30. BRAIN FUNCTION IN PROBLEM CHILDREN AND C0N-
US DEPARTMENT OF HEAI-TH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE PUBLIC TROLS PSYCHOMETRIC. NEUROLOGICAL, AND
HEALTff SERVICE, 5600 FISHERS LANE, ROCKVILLE MD 20852; ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC COMPARISONS. By A.
US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE NA- WIKLER; J. F. DIXON, Md J. B. PARawt AMERICAN
TIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, 5600 FISHERS LANE, , PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 1200 11TH STREET, NW.
ROCKVILLE, MD 20852; NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL WASHINGTON DC 20038. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF psy-
ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM; BRITISH MEDICAL RESEARCH COUN- CHMTRY, V 127, N 1 (NOVEMBER 1970). P·634-&45.
CIL. NCJ.H218
Availability: HALST.ED PRESS, 605 THIRD AVENUE. NEW YORK NY
PSYCHOMETRIC, NEUROLOGICAl.. AND
10016.
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC (EEG) OAT', ON 24 CHILDREN
26. BIOSOCIAL FACTORS· AND PRIMARY PREVENTION OF WITH SCHOLASTIC AND BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS BUT NO CLASSI"
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR (FROM NEW PATHS IN CRIMI· CAL EVIDENCE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISEASE ARE COMPARED
NOLOGY INTERDISCIPLINARY AND INTERCULTURAL EX- WITH DATA FOR 24 MATCHED CONTROLS. . .. '
PLORATIONS. 11178, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND S Supplemental Notes: PRESEIllTED AT THE 123RD ANNUAL MEET·
OIORA SHOHAM-SEE NCJ-55340), By S. A. MEDNICK. ING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION. SAN FRAN-
HEATH LEXINGTON BOOKS, 125 SPRING STREET, LEXING- CISCO, CALIFOANIA, MAY 11·15.1970. .
TON MA 02173. 9 p. 1979. NCJ-55343
Sponcorlng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
A THEORY REGARDING THE INTERACTION OF BIOLOGICAL AND AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH. 9000 ROCK·
·SOCIAL FACTORS AS DETERMINANTS OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR IS VILLE PIKE, BETHESDA MD 20014.
DISCUSSED, WITH REFERENCE TO GENETIC AND SKIN CONDUC-
TANCE ~ESEARCH AND TO PRIMARY PREVENTION. $1. SRAIN INJURY AND CRIMINAUTV-A RETR09PECT1VE
SponiOrIng A~: US DEPAR1'MENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, STUDY. By M. VIRKKUNEN, A. NUunLA. _ S.
AND WELFARE NATIONAL INST OF MENTAL HEALTH CENl'ER FOR HUUSKO. PHYSICIAN POSTGRADUATE PRESS, BOX
STUDIES OF CRIME AND DELINQUENCY, WASHINGTON, DC 20203. 38293, MEMPHIS TN 3813.8. DISEASES OF THE NER·
VOUS SYSTEM, V. ~8,N 11 (NOVEMBER 1(17). P 907~908.
28. BIOSOCIAL LEARNING THEORY AND CRIMINAL BEHAV· NCJ.5ef4t
lOR. By C. R. JEFFER'i'. 44 p. 1975. .HCJ-40127 A 32· TO 37-YEAR FOLLOWUP OF 1,830 FINNISH VETERANS OF
REView OF CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORIES WITH FOCUS ON THE EF- WORLD WAR II WHO HAD SUFFERED A PENETRATING BRAIN
FECTS Of GENETIC.s ON CRIME AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. INJURY WAS PERFORMED TO DETERMINE IF BFlAININJURY IS
SUpplerntntal Notn: REVISION OF PAPER PRESENTED AT CORRELATED WITH THE INCIDENCE OF CRIMINALITY.
ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY,
NOV 1975. SAN FRANCISCO. 32. BUCCAL SMEAR AND D!RIr.'IATQ.GLVPHIC.STUDIES IN JU-
VENILE DELINQUENCY. 8y9. S. AGARWAL. N. SETHI, l.-
27. BI-ACKBOARD JUMBLE. By I. EISENBERG. LAWREN t(. GUPTA, and B. B. SETHI. INDIAN PS.YCHIATRIC .
PRODUCTIONS. INC, POBOX e66, MENDOCINO CA 95460. SOCIETY, c/o S. C, S., MASTER, ~22 M. GANDHI ROAD,
, 1978. NCJ·52026 POONA, INDIA. INDIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 16,
N 4 (11:175), P 244-250. NCJ057143
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVE-
NILE DELINQUENCY IS DISCUSSED, AND THE DIVERSIONARY PRO-
GRAMS OPERATING IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY. CALIF., AIMED AT AN INDIAN STUDY OF SEX CHROMOSOME CONF1QURA'TlONS AND
LEARNING.DISABLED DELINQUENTS ARE DOCUMENTED. DERMATOGLYPHIC CHARACTERISTICS (RIDGES ON THE' HANDS
AND FEET) IN 100 MALE JUVENILE DELINQUENTS ANP 106
SUpplemfntal Notee: 23, MINUTES, 16MM cOLOR, 11178 RENTAL
MATCHED CONTROLS IS REPORTED.
AVAILABl.E VIDEOCASSETTE ALSO AVAILAJilLE FOR PURCHASE
ONLY.
AVIIII8bIIIty: LAWAEN PRODUCTIONS, INC, POBOX 666, MENDO-
33. CAN CHOCOLATE TURN YOU INTo ACAIMINAL;·.
liXpERTS SAV SQ.. By, T. D.scHEUJ:WlDT•.. J()URfo/A!.
CINO CA 95460, (F1lml OF THE INTERNATlONALA(JAtJEMy'·(JF PREYSmVE
MEDICINE, V 4. N 2 (WINTER· 1917),' P se.:89.· ...
a. BLOOO,HI$TAMINE AND OTHER BLOOD COMPONENTS
, ". """"/·">'~,r:''':'.<.~
. , RELATED TO PERSONAUTY mAlTS AND CRIMINAL BE-
HAVIOR 1M JAIL INMATES. .By C,, GROEstECK.1H1d .B, THIS ARTICLE DOCUMENTS .THE FINDINGS OFSEYERAi.; w,:.Ji.TIi
llI'ASARO. "mRRIS COUNTY OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF, EXPERTS AND OISCUSSE~THE tHEORIES oF. CP,1'-4INAL,.J.UST\CE

.~:,:
CAN -The Etiology

PROFESSIONALS WHICH LINK AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR WITH AN FASCICULE-CANADA.) PRINTING AND PUBLISHING
INDIVIDUAL'S .DlET. SUPPLV AND SERVICES CANADA. OTTAWA K1A OS9,
~tal Not.~ REPRINTED FROM THE WALL STREET JOUR· CANADA. 30 p. 1977. Canada. (In EngHsb and
NAL. JUNE 2,1977, P 1. Fronch) NCJ.481115
PRENATAL BIOLOGICAL INFLUENCES IN THE GENESIS OF CRI
34. CAN FINGERPRINT PAtTERNS PREDI~ CRIMINAL BE· NAUTY ARE DISCUSSED IN TESTIMONY PRESENTED BEFOR A
HAVIOR? By O. L OLASOW. INSTITUTE OF APPLIED COMMlnEE OF THE CANADIAN SENATE.
SCIENCE. FINGERPRINT AND IDENTIFICA TION MAGA· Supplemental Notft: SECOND PROCEEDING ON THE I UIRY
ZINE, V 56, N 2 (AUGUST 1974), P 3·1. NCJ.111273 INTO SUCH EXPERIENCES IN PRENATAl.. LIFE AND EARLY CHILD-
THE AUTHOR EXAMINES THE POSSIBI..E RELATIONSHIPS BE· HOOD AS MAY CAUSE PERSONALITY DISORDERS OR CRIMINAL
lWEEN CERTAIN FINGERPRINT CHARACTERISTICS, SOCIAL AND BEHAVIOUR IN LATER LIFE, SENATE OF CANADA, NOVEMBER 24,
MENTAL VARIABLES, AND THE COMMISSION OF CRIME. 1977.
AvaHablllty: PRINTIN~ A'ND PUBLISHING SUPPLY AND SERVICES
36. CA~~ADA-NATIONAL e~'MPOSIUM ON MEDICAL SCI· CANADA, OTTAWA K1A OS9, CANADA.
ENCES AIIID THE CRIMIUAL LAW-PROCEEDINGS-HELD
UNlvERerrv OF TORONTO, MAY 28-211,1973. UNIVERSI· . 40. CHILDHOOD OF MALES WITH THE XVY SYNDROME. By
TY OF TORONTO CENTRE OF CRIMINOLOGY, TORONTO, J. NIELSEN, K. R. CHRISTENSEN, U. FRIEDRICH, E.
CANADA. 169 p. 1974. Canada. NCJ·15040 ZEUTHEN, .nd O. OSTERGAARD. PLENUM PUBUSHING i
PAPERS BV BIOCHEMISTS, PHARMACOLOGISTS, PSYCHOLOGISTS, CORPORATION, 227 WEST 17TH STREET, NEW YORK NY
10011. JOURNAL OF AUnSM AND CHIWHOOD SCHIZO-
NEUROLOGISTS, AND PHYSIOLOGISTS ON MAneRS AFFECTING
PHRENIA, V 3, N 1 (JANUARY·MARCH 1973). P 5-26.
HUMAN AND SPECIFICALLY CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, WITH ~E· NCJ·571....
SPONSES BY CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERSONNEL
A PSYCHIATRIC EVAi.UATION OF 2 BOYS WITH ABNORMAL XVY
IponeOrInG AQ.ney: ONTARIO MINISTAY OF HEALTH. CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENTS IS PRESENTED IN THIS DANISH
STUDV, ALONG WITH A RETROSPECTIVE INVESTIGATION OF 'THE
H. CHEMICAL BREW OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. By E. P0- CHILDHOOD AND EARLY ADOLESCENCE OF 20 ADULT XVY PA·
DOLSKY. WILLIAMS AND WILKINS COMPANY, 426 EAST
PRESTON STREET, BAL'nMORE MD 21202; NORTH· TIENTS.
WESTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, 357 EAST CHI·
CAGO AVENUE, CHICAGO IL 60611. JOURNAL OF CRIMI· 41. CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, BIOCHEMISTRY OF THE
NAL LAW, CRIMINOLOGY, AND POLICE SCIENCE, V 45 BRAIN, AND CRIMINALITY. (ABERRATIONS CHROMO-
(1955), P 676-878. NCJ·58511 SOMIQUES, BIOCHIMIE DUR CERVEAU ET CRIMINALITE.)
ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN CRIMINAL AND AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR
By P. CHAUCHARD, Q. DEBRAY, P. DEKlfI''''~, J. DUBLIN-
EAU, Ind P. KAF!LI. EDITIONS NERET, 23, HUE DE CHA·
AND VARIOUS BIOCHEMICAL FACTORS-·HYPOGLYCEMIA, CAl..· BROL, B.P. 59·X, 75462 PARIS, FRANCE; INSTITUT DE
CiUM DEFICIENCIES, ABNORMAL ENDOCRINE GLAND CRIMINOLOGIE DE PARiS, 12 PLACE CU PANTHEON, 75005
ACTIVITY-liRE DISCUSSED. PARIS, FRANCE. 34 p. 1975. France. (In French)
NCJ.31137ti
37. CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES AS CAUSES OF CRIMINAL BE· COLLECTION OF FIVE SHORT PAPERS WHICH EXAMIN~ BIOLOGI-
HAVIOR ISSUE NO 1-FIRST PROCEEDING-CANADA. CAL INFLUENCES ON CRIMINAL AND AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN
(DELINQUANCE IMPUTABLE AUX EXPERIENCES DE L'EN- MAN AND ANIMALS AND THEIR RAMIFICATIONS FOR CORREC-
FANeE FASCICOLE NO I-PREMIER FASCICULE-
CANADA.) PRINTING AND PUBLISHING SUPPLY AND TIONAL TREATMENT.
SERVICES CANADA, OTTAWA KiA OS9, CANADA. 157 p.
1977. Canll\da. (In English and FfBfIch) NCJ-48784 42. CHROMOSOMAL DEVIATION AND CRIME (FROM CRIME
ANP JUSTICE, 11171).11171/ 11172, BY J SUSMAN-8r.:!E
BRAIN DYSFUNCTION AS A CAUSAL FACTOR IN PERSISTENT NCJ.27315). By M. AMIR Ind Y. BERMAN. AMS PRESS
CRIMINAl.. DEVIANCY IS DISCUSSED IN TESTIMONY PRESENTED INC, 56 EAST 13TH STREET, NEW VORK NY 10003. 8 p.
BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF THE SENATE OF CANADA. 1972. NCJ.273?1
IupplelMnftll Not..: FIRST PROCEEDING ON THE INQUIRY INTO AN EVALUATION AND CRITIQUE OF STUDIES LINKING CRIMINAL-
SUCH EXPEF<IENCES IN PRENATAL L;:-c AND EARLY CHILDHOOD ITY TO THE XVY CHROMOSOME SYNDROME.
AS MAY CAUSE PERSONALITY DISORDERS OR CRIMINAL BEHAV· '.
lOR IN LATER L!FE, SENATE OF CANADA, JUNE 30,1977. 43. CHROMOSOMAL STUDIES OF PRISON INMATeS WITH RE.
Avllltabtay: PRINTING AND PUBLISHING SUPPI..Y AND SERVICES LATiONSHIP TO OFFENCE CHARACTERISTICS. By M. O.
CANADA, OTTAWA K1A ose, CANADA. . JONEJA/ A. A. TRAVILL, and O. D. SCOTT. CANADIAN
PSVCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, 225 LlSGAR STREET, SUITE
38. CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES AS CAUSES OF CRIMINAL BE- 103, OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA. CANADIAN PSYCHI.
HAVIOR ISSUE NO 10-CANADA. (DELINQUANCE IM- ATRIC ASSOCIAnON JOURNAL, V 17, N 2 (APRIL 1972),
PUTABLE AUK EXPERIENCES DE L'ENfANCE FASCICULE P 147·148. NCJ.5Il733
NO 10.... CANADA,) PRINTING AND PUBLISHING SUPPLY THE STUDY OF CHROMOSOME CONFIGURATIONS IN 65 INMATES
AND SERVICES CANADA, OTTAWA K1II OS9, CANADA. 42 OF A CANADIAN PRISON IS REPORTED BRIEFLY••
p. 1978. Canada. (In gngllsh ahd Fronch)
NCJ-48774 Supplem.ntal Not..: PRESENTED AT CANADIAN PSYCt:lI~TRIC AS-
SOCIATION MEETING, HALIFAX, JUNE 1971.
A CHILO PSYCHIATRIST AND RESEARCHER IN THE AREA OF ANTI·
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR OF CHILDREN SUMMARiZeS HIS RESEARCH 44. CHROMOSOME :'RRORS IN MEN WITH ANTISOCIAL DE·
FINDINGS IN TI:STIMONY BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF THE CANADI· HAVIOR COMPARISON OF SELECTED MEN WITH KLINE-
AN SENATE. FELTER'S SYNDROME AND XYV CHROMOSOME. PAT·
IKWletrtentll riot..: PROCEEDINGS OF THE SENATE OF CANADA, TERN. By I). BAKER, M. A. TELFER, C. E. RICHARDSON,
~~UARV 28, 1978. Ind O. R. CLARK. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO II. 00610.
A~PRINTING AND PUBLISHING SUPP\.Y AND SERVICES
JOURNAL OF TH15 AM15R1CAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, . V
CANADA; ·OTTAWA KiA OS9, CANADA. 214, N 5 (NOVEMBER 2, 19'1'0), P 8690878. NCJ.G4100
31. CHll.DHooD EXPERI!NCES AS CAUSES OF CRIMINAL BE- CYTOGENETIC SCREENING OF 876 MALES IN PRISONS AND
HAVIOUAI8SUE NO 1_3ECOND PROCEEDING- FACILITIES FOR THE MENTAL\.Y ILL AND RETARDED IDENTIFIED
CANADA. (DELlNaUANCE IMPUTABLE AUX EXPERI- 23 MEN WITH HISTORIES OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR WHO EVI·
ENCES DE LIENFANCE FASCIr.ULE NO f-DEUXIEME DENCED CHRO~dsOME ERRORS.

4 I
, .~. " ."
of Criminality CONSIDERATIbNa

U. CHROMOSOME SURVEY Of: PERSONS CHARGED WITH FACTORS, DRUG AND ALCOHOL USE. AND B10SOCIAL INFLU·
MURDER. By A. A. BARTHOLOMEW and G.. R. SUTHER· ENCES.
LAND. AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEA~ND SOCIETY OF
CRIMINOLOGY, DEPARTMENt OF ORIMINQLOGY. UNIVER· $poMorIrIg Agency: U S DEPARTMENT Or- JUsnce. LAW eN-
SITY OF MELBOURNE, PARKVILLE, VICTORIA 3052, AUS- FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMIN. NATIONAL IlIISTITUTE oF LAW
TRALIA. 3 p. 1973. Australia. NCJ.144Ot ENFORCEMENT.AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE.
STUDY ON THE POSSIBLE RELATIONSHIP BETWeEN SEX CHRO- AVIIIIabIIItr. MITRE CORPORATION WASHINGTON OPERATIONS,
MOSOME ABNORMALITY AND A(3GRESSIVE BEHAVIOR. 1820 DOLLEY MADISON BOULEVARD, MCLEAN VA 22101 StOck
Order No. M78-81; NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
40. CHROMOSOMES AND CRIME. By A. MONTAGU. ZIFF
DAVIS PUBLISHING COMPANY. ONE PARK AVENUE, NEW &2. COMMENT ON 'REGISTERED CRIMINALITY IN FANIUII
YORK NY 10016. PSYCHOLOGY TOll4Y, V 2, N 5 (OC- WITH CHILDREN AT HIOH RISK FOR SCHIZOPttREHIA' I'
TOBEA 1966), P 43-49. NCJ-S7012 KIRKEGAARD-SORENSEN AND MEDNICK. Ii, D. V. M.
BISHOP. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION.
THE POSSIBLE LINK eEiWeEN CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES 1200 1'lTH STREET. NW. WASHINGTON DC 20036.· JOUR.
AND CRIME, PAAT/CU~ALY THE PRESENCE IN SOME MAI.ES OF NAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 85, N 2 (APRIL
AN EXTRA Y CHROMOSOME, IS DISCUSSED IN THIS REVIEW OF 1976), P 240-242. NCH7141
EARLY RESEARCH FINDINGS FROM THE 1960'S.
CONCLUSIONS DRAWN IN A STUDY BY KIRKEGMRD-SORENSON
AND MEDNICK (1975) COMPARING REGISTERED CRIMINALITY IN
47. CHROMOSOMES OF MALE PAnENTS IN A SECURITY CHILDREN AT RISK FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA WITH CONTROLS ARE
PRISON. By D. J. BARTLETT, W. P. HURLEY, C. R. INVALID DUE TO INADEQUATE SELECTION OF CONTROLS.
BRAND, and E. W. POOLE. MACMILLIAN JOURNALS LTD,
4 LITTLE ESSEX STREET, LONDON WC2R 3LF, ENGL~ND.
NATURE, V 219, N 5152 (JULY 27. 1968), P 351-354•. 53. COMPARAnVE STUDV OF PREDlcnVE CAlT£RIA IN THE
NCJ.57013 PREDISPOSITJON OF HOMICIDAL ADOLESCENTS. lIlY"
B. SENDI and P. G. BLOMGREN. AMERICAN PSVCHIAT.
A CHROMOSOME SURVEY OF 204 MALE INMATES AT A BRITISH RIC ASSOCIATION. 1700 18TH STREET. mi. WASHINGTON
PRISON FOR THE PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT OF OFFENOeRS IS DC 20009. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V
REPORTED. 132, N 4 (APRIL 1975). P 423-427. NCH'11N
THREE FACTOR8-CLINICAL, DEVELOt'MENTAL. AND
••• CUNICAL AND EEG (ELECTROENCEPHOLAGRAM) STUD- ENVIRONMENTAL-ARE EXAMINED AS PREDICTORS oF HOMICi·
IES OF PRISONERS CHARGED WITH MURDER. By M. V. DAL PREDISPOSITION IN SAMPLES OF 10 JUV/:NILE MURDERERS,
DRIVER and M. FAULK. HEADLEY eROS LTD. ASHFORD,
KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH.JOtJRNAL OF PSY· 10 JUVENILES WHO AnEMPTED MURDER, AND 10 CONTROLS.
CHIATRY, V 122, N 571 (JUNE 1973), P 583·587.
NCJ.S7071 54. COMPARAnVE STUDY OF SENSITIVITY TO TOUCH.
THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) READINGS OF 150 MALES WEIGHT AND PAVA AMONG OBSERVATION CINTER
MINORS AND VARIOUS GROUPS OF NORMAL MIHGM,
CHARGED WITH MURDER AND HELD IN CUStODY WHILE AWAIT· PART 2-FRANCE. (E1'UDE COMPAREE DEI UHIIII-
ING TAIAL ARE ANALYZED. UTES TAC11LES, GJlAVIMETnIOUES Itt ALOIQUU ~
LES MIHEURS DE CENTRE D'OBSlRVATION ETDlYJRIU
4D, CUNICAL AND EMPIRICAL CONCEPTIoNs OF ps,YCHOP· POPULATIONS DE HORMAUX; 2 PARTIE.) By P. fL lIZ!,
ATHY, AND THE SELECTION OF SUBJECTS FOR RE· L. PECHADREt and J. "188OUT. Cl:NTRE DE FORMA·
Sf.ARCH !FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR-AP- TION ET DE RECHERCHE DE L'EDUCATION SURVEILLEE,
PROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1.7', BY ~ l'I H"RE AND D 54, RUE DE GARCHES. VAUCRSSSON. ANHALES DE
SCHALlING-SEE NCJ-57600). By R. D. HARE and D. N. VAUCRESSON, N.. (1968), P G-22. (In FnII1ch)
COX. JOHN WRIGHT AND SONS, LTD, 42-44 TRIANGLE NCJ.3027t
WeST. BRISTOL BSS 1EX. ENGLAND. 21 p. 1978. COMPARISON OF THE RESULTS OF PHYSICAL SEN8IT1VI'TV TESTS
Unllad Kingdom. NCJ·57501
ON FRENCH JUVENII.E DELINQUENTS WITH THE RESULTS OF SIM·
CLINICAL CONCEPTIONS OF PSYCHOPATHY AND THE PSYCHO· ILAR TESTS ON GROUj!lS OF NORMAL JUVENILI:;S OF "$OUT THI:
PATHIC PERSQNALITY ARE CONSIDERED ALONG WITH DATA SAME AGE.
BEARING ON THE EMPIRICAL VALIDITY OF THE CONCEPTS AND
THE VARIOUS WAYS IN WHICH SUBJECTS ARE SELECTED FOR 55. COMPARAnVE STUDV OF niE' P8YCttOMQTOR fUNC.
RESEARCH PURPOSES. TlON OF MINORS AT AN OBaiRVA'rIOM Ct!HTE.R AND.OI'
VARIOUS OROIIPl OF '~DE"'NOUEN1't ...fltANCf.
50. CUNICAL SlUt/lEe. By M. cioL.D8TEIN. AMERICAN (ETUDE CO~PAFlE PELA P8YC~IClT£ Ol,~.......
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 635 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, EU~S D'UN CENTRE. D'088I!RVATJON ET DE "IVERIII
CHICAGO IL 60610. ARCHIVES OF NEUROt.OGY, V 30. POPULATIONS DE NQH-OEUNOUANT8.) 8y". R.....
N 1 (JANUARY 1974), I> 26-35.' NCJ·5e802 CENTRE DE FORMATION ET D5RECHERCHE DE L'f!OUCA.
TION SI)RVEII.I.t.:;E. 64, RUE De GAACHES, VAUCAessQH.
FOCUSING ON INDIVIDUAL OR PERSONAL VIOLENCE RATHER ANNALES DE VAUCRESSON, .. \II 1 (1963), P 7-88. (In
THAN GANG OR MASS DELlNQUENC't'. SELECTED CLINICAL OB· F'6IICh) , ~
SERVATIONS ON THE PSYCHIATRIC. NEUROLOGICAL. AND NEUR·
REPORT ON A STUDY BASElD ON CLINICAL EXAMINATIONS OF ,i
OPSYCHOPATHIC DIMENSIONS OF AGGAESSION ARE CONSID·
THE PSYCHOMOTOR FUNCTI6N$ Of: VARIOUS JCJVi:NI~J)EUN­
EAED. QUENTS AND NONDELINQUENTQ, OEeCRIBING THE EXAMINATION
PROCESS IN DETAil AND PRESENTING CONCLUSIONS, ' , '
61. COLLOOUIUr. ON THE CORRlil.ATE8 OF,CRIMI; AND THE "
DETERMINANTS OF CAIMINAL IlJEHAVlOh-PROCEEIJ.
INOB. L. OTTEN, Ed. MITRE CORPORATION. POBOX 9. eotmIO-=RATtoNf) REGAfiDINQ. THE ftOf.~l()PtHOl.OGl.
206, BEDrORD MA 01730. 197 p. 1978. ,NCJ.53454 . CAl,. FACTORS Itl THe ETlOI.OQY·C;P CRIMINALITY. If
8. A. MEDNICK. INtERt4A'rIONAt. CENTRE t:OR elOLOGr.
THIS ANTHOLOGY OF PAPERS BY CAIMINAL JU~TICE EXPERTS, CAL AND MEDICO-FORENSIC' CJAIMINOLOGY, Po QO)f
SOCIOI.OGISTS, AND PSYCHOLOGISTS. CONCERNING CRIMINAk 22215, SAO PAULO. BRAZIL.·· ~4 p. 1975,·· \!Jtllzll. .
BEHAVIOR Den:RMINANTS CONSIDERS PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAl- . NCJ4_
:', '

.. ,
-~~--,.",P'"-------~-------------"""'------
. CORRELATION ..
The Etiology
.

nus STUDY SUGGESTS THAT GENETICAllY-CONTROllEO BID· TIONSi IT Is INTENDED FOR CRIMINOLOGISTS, PSYCHOLOGISTS.
LOGICAL FACTORS DO PLAY A ROLe IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI· EDUCATORS, LAWMAKERS, AND POLITICAL SCIENTISTS.
NALITY. AvailabilItY: SHOe STRING PRESS. 995 SHERMAN AVENUE
Supplementai No_INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CRIMINOl· HAMDEN Cr 06514.
OGY, 2D-BIOLOGICAL MODEL, PART 2. '\
64. CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AND THE PHYSICAL ENV
57•. coRRELATION BETWEEN .STATURE, CHARACTER OISOR. MENl-A PERSPECTIVE. By C. R. JEFFERY.
DER AND CRlailINAUTV. By J. NIELSEN and T. TSUDOI. PUBLICATIONS, INC, 275 SOUTH BEVERLY DRIV EVER·
HEADLEY BROS lTD, ASHFORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENG· LY HILLS CA 90212. AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL S YENTI$T,
LAND. BRmSH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 116, N V 20, N 2 (NOVEMBER·DECEMBER 1976), P 149·174.
631 (1970), P 145·150. NCJ-58769 NCJ.41000
A CoRRELATION BETWEEN THE STATURI$ OF 771 ,MALE PATIENTS THIS ART/CLE CRITICALLV REVIEWS THE VARIOUS EXPLANA·
ADMmeO 10 AARHUS PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL IN DENMARK AND TIONS FOR AND PARADIGMS OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, INCLUDING
CHARACTER DISORDER AND CRIMINALITY-IN THESE SUBJECTS THE ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN, PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT, AND
AS SUGGESTED BY THEIR CRIMINAL RECORDS IS INVESTIGATED. SOCIa-PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES.
SUppl.mental Not..: REPRINT.
61. CRIME AND DYSLEXIA. BV J. KERR. FORENSIC PUB·
L1SHING COMPANY, BOX 18, BOG NOR REGIS, P022 7M, 65. CRIMINAL LAW-THE XYY CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT
ENGLAND. CRIMINOLOGIST. V 8, N 29 (SUMMER AND CRIMINAL CONDUCT. By R. HOUSLEY. UNIVER·
1973), P 29-32. NCJ-11932 SITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESS, NORMAN OK 73069. OKLA-
DRAWING ON BRITISH RESEARCH, THE AUTHOR RELATES DEVI· HOMA LAW REVIEW, V 22, N 3 (AUGUST 1969). P287-301.
ANT BEHAVIOR TO A READING OISABILITY WITH ITS RESULTANT NCJ.o57211
LOW ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT, FRUSTRATION, AND REBELLION. THIS ARTICLE REVIEWS THE MEDICAL INVESTIGATiON OF THE
XYV CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT AND EXAMINES THE LEGAL 1M·
St. CRIME AND PERSONALITY. By H. J. EYSENCK.
204 p. PLICATIONS OF A POSSIBLE ASSOCIA'TlON BETWEEN GENETIC
1964. NcJ-04548 ABNORMALITIES AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR.
PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY ON THE NATURE OF CRIMINAl.• BEHAV-
IOR. BASED ON MODERN EXPERIMENTAL WORK IN LEARNING 88. CRIMINAL LAW V c~IMINOLOGY-A QUESTION OF RE·
AND CONDITIONING. SPOt.'SIBILITY. By C. V. HASSEL. FEDERAL BUREAU
OF INVESTIGATION, WASHINGTON DC 20535. FBI LAW I
Availability: HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY, 1 BEACON STREET. ENFORCEMENT BULLETIN. V 44, N 10 (OCTOaER 1975),
BOSTON MA 02108. P 11-15. NCJ-2t413
80. CAIME AND PERSONALITY, 3D Eb. By H. J. EYSENCI<. BRIEF ANALYSIS OF VARIOUS BIOLOGICAL. ANTHROPOLOGICAl.,
222 p. 1977. United Kingdom. NCJ·42849 SOCIOLgGICAL, AND GENETIC EXPLANATIONS FOR CRIMINAL BE-
IT IS ARGUED THAT CRIMINAL AND NON·CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR HAVIOR, CONCLUDED BY THE AUTHOR'S SUPPORT OF CRIMINAL
RESpoNSIBILITY BASED ON MAN'S FREE WILL AND RATIONALITY. ,
STEM FROM A COMBINATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL \=ACTORS
CONDITIONING BEHAVIOR, AND BIOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS
87. CRIMINAL LIFE CURVES OF MONOZYGOTIC TWIN-PAIRS.
,, ,
THAT AFFECT THe.CONDITIONABILITY OF EACH PERSON. By S. YOSHIMASU. JAPANESE ASSOCIATION OF CRIMI.
Ai/aUablllty. ROUTLEDGE AND f<EGAN PAUL LTD. BROADWAY NOLOGY. TOKYO MEDICAL AND DENTAL UNIV. 1-CHOM!:.
HOUSE, 68·74 CARTER LANE, LONDON. ENGLAND. YUSHIMA, BUNKYO·KU, TOKYO 113, JAPAN•• ACTA CRI·
MfNOLOGIAE ET MEOIC/NAE LEGALIS JAPANICA., (1965). ,.
\

81. ORIME, MALNUTRmON, AND OTHER FOAMS OF CERE· P 144·lI'i3, 190·197. NCJ-55262
BRAL TRAUMA. By C. P. HELLON. HUXLEY INSTITUTE IN THIS JAPANeSE STUDY, DEMOGRAPHIC AND DEVIANT DATA ,, ,,
FOR BIO.SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1114 FIRST AVENUE. NEW ON SEVERAL SETS OF MONOZYGOTiC TWINS ARE ANALYZED IN
YORK NV 10021. ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, V
SUPPORT OF THE E.XISTENCE OF A DEFINITE TYPE OF CRIMINAL
4, N 4 (1975). P 256-280. NCJ.34518
LIFE CURVE CHARACTERISTIC OF AN INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL
DISCUSSION OF THE NEED FOR BEHAVIORJ'L SCIENTISTS TO
CONCENTRA.TE THEIR STUDIES ON THOSE WHO VIOLATE THE 68. CRIMINAL PATIENTS WITH XYY SElCoCHROMOSOME COM·
LAW BECAUSE THEY ARE OVE~WHELMED BY CERTAIN CONDI-
TIONS OR BECAUSE THEY CANNOT CONTROL THEIR BEHAVIOR.
PLEMENT. By W. H. PRICE, J. A. STRONG, P. B. WHAT·
MORE, and W. F. MCCLEMONT. LANCET, 7 ADAM ..
11

82. CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE ORTHOMOLECULAR


APPROACH PANEL DISCUaslON WITH AUDIENCE PAR-
.STREET. ADELPHI, LONDON, ENGLAND. LANC/rr. V 1,
N 7436 (MARCH 5,1966), P 565·566. NCJ~58731 ,.
THE CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF NINE MALE OFF/;:NOERS
TICIPATION (CRIME. MALNUTRITION AND THE ORTHO- WITH ABNORMAL CHROMOSOME CONFIGURATIONS ARE DE-
MOLECULAR APPROACH CPNFERENCE). By W. PHIl..- SCFlIBED BRIEFLY.
POTT, J. BARON, O. PRASTKA, and S. RASMUSSEN.
1916. NCJ040033
8~. CRIMli':'~L
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY (FROM PROGRESS IN
FIVE MI~I)TES OF HOUR·LONG TAPED PANEL DISCUSSION NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY. V 2l!. 1N8). By S. B. I'
RELATE TO WHAT \;;r:FECTS DIET CAN HAVE ON HEROIN ADDIC· MAUGHG. GRUNE AMu STRA7TON, INC. 6 p. 1968. I;
liON AND ALCOHOLISM. AND HOW DETECTION AND TREATMENT NCJ-67212 \
'OF PREORUG PERSONALITY PROBLEMS CAN COMBAT SUCH ILL· THIS CHAPTER REP-ORTS ON 14 foRllC;' ~s CONCERNING CRIMI·
NESSES: NAL PATHOLOGY, INCLUDING S1UDIES OF ~"l:t\ITICAL TWINS, USE
~"I Notl1;70 MINUTES. 1978. OF ELECTROENCEPHAI.OGRf,PH'( (EEG'S), TNt:.· TING DELIN·
AVlHtbIIitv: HUXLEV INSTITUTE FOR BID-SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1114 QUENTS. WIFE AND CHILD KILLING. WOME:N PRISONERS. AND
FIRST AVENUE, NEW VORl' NY 10021 (Audio Co,a8tto) XYV MALES.
U. CRIMINAL ~D HIS VICTIM-STUDIES IN THE 80010810- 70. CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY (FROM PROGRESS IN
LOQV Of! CRIME. By"•. HENTIO. ARCHON BOOKS NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, V 27., 1972,8'1 E A &PIE-
(SEE SHoe· STRING PRESS). 469 p. ·'967. (JEL). By s. B. MAUGHS. GRUNE AND STRAITON, INC.
. NCJ-49Q52 4 p. 1972. HCJ-&7184
THIS BQQI< EXAMINSS SOCIOLOGIQAl. AND PHYSIOLOGICAL FAC' THIS ARTICLE REPORTS SEVERAL PSYCHIATRIO INVESTIGATION$
TORS tHAT CAN COMElINE TO CREATE CFIIMI~OGENIC SITUA· OF VARIOUS TYPES OF OFFENDERS, INOLUDING ADO~ESCENT

; .
6
, .
of ,Crlmlnlliity CRITERION

SHOPlfFTSFIS AND ADULT PSYCHOPATHS. CLINICAL STUDIES 780 CRIMINO-BIOLOGIC STUDY OF PATIENTS WITH THE XYY
WHICH USED THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM ARE ALSO RE· SVNDROME AND kUNEFELTER'S SYNDROME. BY T.
PORTEb. TSUeo., SPRINGER·VERLAG, 175 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW
YORI< NY 10010. HUMAN GENETIcs. V 10, N 1
71. CRIMINAUTV AMONG pATIENTS WITH KUNEFELTER'S (AUGUST 17,1970), P67-84. NCJ·5700s
SYNDROME AND THE XVV SYNDROME. By J. NIELSEN. THIS ARTICLE REPORTS THE FINDINGS OF AN INVESTIGATION OF
HEADLEY BROS lTD, ASHFORD, I<ENT TN24 8HH, ENG· 12 PSYCHOPATHIC PATIENTS WITH CHROMOSOME ABERRA·
LAN[). BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATFlY, V 117, TIONS, WHO WERE FOUND AMONG 480 PERSONS IN 2 DANISH IN·
(1970), P 365-369. NCJ.58770 STITUTIONS FOR CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS.
TO DETERMINE THE FREQUENCY AND TYPES OF CRIMINALITY
AMONG MEN WITH KLINEFELTeR'S SYNDROME ANp THE XYV 77. CRIMINOLOGICAL ANl'KROPOLOGY. (ANTHROPOLOGIE
SYNDROME, A STUDY WAS CONDUCTED USING A SAMPLE OF 13 CRIMINELLE.) BV P. GRAPIN. 126 p. 1973. France.
RESIDENTS OF PSYCHIATRIC AND MEDICAL WARDS AND PRIS· (In Ff'8nch) NCJ.141191
ONS. OVERVIEW OF HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY CRIMINOLOGI.
CAL THEORIES WHICH ARE BASED ON THE STUDY OF PHYSICAL
72. CRIMINALITY AND CHROMOSOMAL CONSTITUTION-RE· AND MENTAL CHARACTERIsTICS OF OFFENDERS.
SUI.TS OF A GENETIC STUDY OF THREE POPULATIONS Avallllblllty: PRESSES UNIVEASITARIES DE FRANCE, 10B. BOULE·
OF. CRIMINALS AND OF A CONTROL GROUP FROM THE VARD SAINT·GERMAIN, PAAIS, FRANCE.
GENERAL POPULATION. (i<RIMINALITAET UNO CHRD-
IIIOBOMALE KONSTITUTION-ERGEBNISSE EINER GENE·
TlSCHEN UNTERSUCHUNG VON DREI POPULATIONEN 78. CRIMINOLOGjCAL ANTHROPOLOGY. (ARGOMENTI DI
KRIMINELLER UNO EINER VERGLEICHSSERIEAUS DER ANTROPOLOGIA CRIMINOLOGICA.) By B. PANNAIN.
DURC"SCHNmseEvoEL~ERUNG.) By U. 349 p. 1973. Italy. (In Italian) NCJ.~'"
KLEIN-VOGLER ./ld W. HABERLANDT. CARL HEY· THEORIES AND PRINCIPLES OF THE STUDY, OF THE CAUSES OF
MANNS VERLAG, GEREONSTR 113·32,5 COLOGNE 1, WEST CRIME FROM THE BIOLOGICAL POINT OF VIEW FEATURING THE
GERMANY. MONA TSSCHRIFT FUER KRIMfNOLOGIE UNO CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE FIELD MADE IN ITALY.
STRAFRECHTSREFORM, V 57, N 8 (DECEMBER 1974), P
329-337. (In Gem',sn) NCJ·111332 Av.llabillty: LIGUORI EDITORE, NAPLES. ITALY.
IN ACCORDANCE WITH OTHER ATTEMPTS TO EXPLAIN CRIM!NAL· 70. CRIMINOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE FAMILY IN THE
ITY Nd A BIOLOGICAL PHENOMENON. THIS WEST GERMAN STUDY LIGHT OF THE STUDIES OF CRIMINAl. TWINS. By S. YO-
FOUND A HIGHER RATE OF CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS IN SHIMASU. JAPANESE ASSOCIATION OF CRIMINOLOGY,
THE CRIMINAL POPULATIONS THAN IN THE. GENERAL POPULA· TOKYO MEDICAL AND DENTAL UNIV. 1·CHOME, YUSHIMA,
TlON. BUNKYO-KU, '(OKYO 113, JAPAN. ACTA CRIMfNOLOGIAE
ET MF.OICINAE LEGALIS JAPAN/CA, V 2.7. (1961), P
73. CRlfdlHAUTY AND VlOLENCE IN EPILEPTIC PRISONERS• 117·141. NCJ.55311
.i", .By ... GUNN .nd J. bONN. HEADLEY BROS LTD, ASH· THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT IN
FORD. KENT TN~4 8HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH JOURNAL THE CAUSATIVE FACTORS OF CRIME IS EXAMINED, IN LIGHT OF
OF PSYCHIATFlY, V 118, N 544 (MARCH 1977). P 337·343. PAST RESEARCH IN JAPAN USING MONOZVGOTIC. TWINS WITH
NCJ.57070 LATENT OR ESTABLISHED CRIMINAL L1FI: CUFIVES. .
DIFFERENCeS IN THE CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR OF 158 EPILEPTIC AND
too NONEPILEPTIO PRISONERS IN 20 PENAL INSTITUTIONS IN 10. CRIMINOLOGY AS AN INTERDISCIPUNARY BEHAVIORAL
ENGLAND AND WALES ARE EXPLORED. SCIENCE. By C. R. JEFr:ERV. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF
IUppletntntal Notc:oo: SYNOPSIS OF THIS PAPER APPEARED IN THE CRIMINOLOGY, 1314 KINNEAR ROAD, COLUMBUS, OH
OCTOBER1070JOURNA~ 43212; SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC, 275 SOUTH BEVERLY
DRIVE, BEVERLY HILLS eA 90212. CRIMINOLOGY,. V
74, CRIMINALITY IN ADOPTEES AND THEIR ADOPTIVE AND 16, N 2 (AUGUST 1978), P 149·189. NCJ.507IO
. BIOLOGICAL pARENTS-A PILOT STUDY (FROM BIOSC)o BASIO ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT HUMAN NATURE THAT INFLUENCE
CIAL.1J.AaEI Of CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 11171, BY SARNOFF APPROACHES TOWARDS CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINA!.. JUSTICE
A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE ARE EXAMINED, AND A NEW BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY MODEL IS
NCJ....72.5). By B. HUTCHINGS .nd S. A. MEDNiCK. PRESENTED.
GARDNER PRESS, INO, 19 UNION SQUARE weST. NEW
YORK NY 10003. 15 p. 1977, Nc.J ....72H '1. CRITERION OF BRAIN IHSTABILlTV-EEG (Eu:cmOEN·
THE COfIRELATION BE1WEEN THE ORIMINALITY OF THE BIOLOGI· CEPHALOGRAM) ACTIVATION (FROM BRAIN OV$FUN(:.
CAL PARENTS AND THAT OF THE AOOPTEES IS EXAMINED, WHILE TIOM IN AOGRE88IVE CRIMINAL,S, 11178, BY hU88l!LL R
ASSURING 1'HAT THE CORRELATION IS INDEPENDENT OF THE MONROE-lEE NCJ-5311t). By lit. R. MONROE. 0. U.
CRIMINALITY OF THE ADOPTIVE PAFlENTS. BAU&, IfId D. MCCULLOCH. HEATH LEXINGTON
BOOKS, 1llS SPRING STREET, l.E)(INGTON M~ 02173. 16
~ AgtnCy: US DEMRTMSNT OF HEALTH. EDUOATION,
AND WELFARE NATIONAL INST OF MENTAL HEALTH CENTER FOR
p. 1978. Nc,J.&311l4
STUDIES OF CRIME AND DELINQUENCY. WASHINGTON. DC 20203. THE USE Or- ELECTflOENCEPHALOGI=IAMS'(EEG). TO' STUDY
HAROCORE AGGRESSORS IS DISCUSSED IN LIGHT ClF THE HY·
74. CRIMINAUTY IN XVV AND XXY MEN: ·Iv H. A, WITKIN, POTHESIS THAT SOME AGGReSSIVE BEHAVIOA IS LINkeo TO
jS. A. MEDHICK,F. SCHULSINGER. E. BAKKESTRotI, K. O. EEG . ABNORMAI.IlIES TI-IA'f REF.LECT CENTRAL NeR~US
CHRISTIANSEN, D. R. GOODENOUGH, It1d 1<. HIRSCH- SYSTEM INSTABILITY.
HORN. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE·
MENT OF SCIENCE, 1515 MASSAOHUSETTS AVENUE. NW, '2. tRlT£RION OF DvecON1ROi.-A sEl.F.RATI"G $cALS
WAsHINGTON po 20005. SCIENCE, V 193. (AUGUST (FROM eMit. DV~UNCfION IN. AGG"ESllI~ (:RI"'I-
1978), P 547·555. NCJ.3t253 HAL&, it'l'; BY RUSSELL A WNROE-HE MCJ.iS311.,,'
REPeAT ONA OANISH STUPY WHiCH COMPAijEo CAIME RATES By R. R. MONROE. HEATH LEXINGTON BOO~. 126
OF 'I:f AND XYY AOUt.TMALES AND EXAMINED POSSIBLE Mfi,:oIAT· 'SPRING STAI;F.T. LEXINGTON MA 02173, 12p. 1Q7S.
INO VARIAaLi:S IN. THE RELATION 'BETWEEN AN EXTFtA V CHRo- . , .. NC,J,S$11t#
MO$QME AND INOAEAsl=D ANTISOCIAl. BEHAV\OFl, IT .IS ARGUEO 'THAT OAt;. CULLE,o FROM 'A srUDY 0': jJi.\ IN-
~... Mottl: ADDITICINAL AurHOAS AI=\E-l,.l,lNoSTEEN, MATES AT MARVI,ANQ'$ fJATUXt:NT INSTitutiON ARE SUpPQAt-
o'::oWeN. D A PHILIP, .I-RUBIN, 0 I)-STOCKING, M'REPRINT. IVE OF THE MONRoe DVS¢OijTROI.SOAL~ ~s AN AOE()VAre
I

;.i
. I
7 I

'I
--.--,-......------"'--------------..,...-_ ...,---.,-~ -----

CROOKED

MEASURE OF THE CORRELATES OF VIOLENT ANTISOCIAL BEHAV· NALITY. IS DESCRIBED IN THREE STAGES: ITS ORIGIN IN THE
lOR. LATE 1800'S; ITS PEAK PERIOD. 1900 TO 1921; AND AFTER
SUpplemental Notn: STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW vdA/< AT
13. CROOKED EARS AND THE BAD BOV SVNDROME-ASYM· ALBANY -DOCTORAL DISSERTATION.
METRY AS AN INDICATOR OF MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNC· Availability: UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS. 300 NORTH ZEEe flO ,
TION. By K. E. DURFEE. MENNINGER FOUNDATION, P ANN ARBOR MI48106. Siock Order No. 1814338.
o BOX 829, TOPEKA KS 66601. BULLETIN OF THE MEN·
NINGER CLINIC. V 38, N 4 (JULY 1974), P 305·316.
NCJ·58735 90. DEFINITION AND PREVALENCE OF LEARNING DISABIL-
ITIES. By P. B. CAMP8£LL 1978.20 p.
EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF ASYMMETRICAL EAR PLACEMENT AS AN NCJ.4I410
INDICATOR OF CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM (CNS) DYSFUNCTION
LEARNING DISABILITIES (LD) ARE DEFINED, AND A SAMPLE
ARE REPORTED. GROUP IS ASSESSED TO DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE OF LD IN
ADJUDICATED AND NONADJUDICATED BOYS.
114. CROWDING AND CIVIL DISORDER-AN EXAMINATION OF
COMPArtATIVE NATIONAL AND CITY DATA. By S. SUpplemental Notaa: PRESENTED AT THE 1976 ACLD (ASSOCI-
WEI.CH and A. SOOTH. SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC, 275 ATION FOR CHILDREN WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES) ANNUAL
SOUTH BEVERLY DRIVE, BEVERLY HILLS CA 90212. CONFERENCE. KANSAS CITY. MISSOUI·\I. ,
I I
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL STUDIES (APRIL 1975), P SponlOring Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN·
58·14. NCJ·37710 FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL INSTITUTE
THE HYPOTHESIS OF' THIS PAPER IS THAT HUMAN CONGESTIONS OF JUVENILE JUSTICE & DELINQUENCY PREVENTION, WASHING.
INDEPENDENT OF ITS LINKAGE WITH SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS TION. DC 20531.
VARIABLES, MAY BE ONE FACTOR CAUSING POLITICAL AGGRES. Availability: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
SION AS EXPRESSED BY ACTS OF CIVIL DISORDER.
Ill. DELINQUENCV AND CRIME-A BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL AP.
115. CROWDING AND URBAN CRIME RATES. By A. BOOTH1 PROACH EMPIRICAL, THEORETICAL, AND PRACTICAL
S. WELCH, and D. R. JOHNSON. SAGE PUBLICATIONS, ASPECTS OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. 8y J. 8. CORTE8
INC. 275 SOUTH BEVERLY DRive. BEVERLY HILLS CA and F. M. GAm. 478 p. 1972. NCJ-117tt
90212. URBAN AFFAIRS QUARTERLY, V 11. N 3 BOOK CONSTRUCTING A BIOPHYSICAL THEORETICAL FORMULA-
(MARCH 1976). P 291 307. MCJ·3I1G37 TiON OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR FROM DATA ON THE CONSTITU·
THE STUDY INVESTIGATED THE EFFECT OF HOUSEHOLD AND TIONAL. TEMPERMENTAL, MOTIVATIONAL, AND FAMILY VARIA·
COMMUNITY CROWDING ON THE INCIDENCE OF CRIMES AGAINST BLES IN THE PERSONALITY OF' DELINQUENTS.
PERSONS AND CRIMES AGAINST PROPERTY IN UNITED STATES Avalleblllly: SEMINAR PRESS, INC, 111 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORI<
CITIES. NY 10003.

1111. CYTOGENETIC AND SOMATIC VARIATION IN THE NEURo- 92. DELlI\:~UENCV AND HEALTH STATUS. !!Iy H. CHAII(UN,
BIOLOGV OF VIOLENCE-EPIDEMIOLOGICAL, CLINICAL f. D. CHESLEY, ~ W. C. J, R.IJT8(NGER. NATIONAL
AND MORPHOQENETIC CONSIDERATIONS (FROM ASSOCIATION OF SOCIAL WORKERS, 1..25 H STREET, NW,
NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AGGRESSION, 1975, WASI--lINGTON DC 20005. HEALTH AND SOCIAL WORK,
BY W S FIELDS ET AL-SEE NCJ·57520). Py L. RAtAVI. V 2, N 3 (AUGUST 1977) P 25-37. NCJ.G1241
WARREN H GREEN. INC, 10 SOUTH BRENTWOOD BOULE· DATA FROM STUDIES OF THE HEALTH OF DEVIANT DELINQUENTS
VARD, ST LOUIS MO 83105. 68 P, 1975.
NCJ·61622 ARE USED AS A BASIS FOR A DISCUSSION ABOUT THE RELATION
BETWEEN POOR HEALTH AND SOME FACTORS BELIEVED TO
THIS ARTICLE FROM THE SYMPOSIUM ON NEU~AL BASES OF VIO· CONTRIBUTE TO DEVIANCY.
LENCE AND AGGRESSION REPORTS THAT SEX CHROMOSOME
ABNORMALITIES ARE NOT THE ONL'l( CAUse OF VIOLENT Br::HAV· 93. DELINQUENCY AND LEARNING DISABILITIES (mOM
lOR IN PERSONS WITH SUCH SNYDROMES. LEAFINING DISABIUTlE8-INTROOUCTiON TO EDUCA·
TION AND MEDICAL MANAGEMENT. BY LEmR TARNO-
87. CYTOGENETIC STUDY IN SEVERE JUVENILE DELlN· POL). By L TARNOPOL. CHARLES C THOMAS,
QUENTS. By V. MEKANANDHA and S. BANPOTKASEM. 301·327 EAST LAWRENCE AVENUE, SPRINGFIELD IL
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND, 3 SILOM STREET, 82717. 26 p. 1967. NCJ.57G30
BANGKOK. THAILAND. JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL AS· THE DELINQUENT. SCHOOL DROPOUT POPULATION FAOM MI·
SOCIATION OF THAILAND, V 55, N 1 (JANUARY 1972). P NORITY GHETTOS IS BELIEVED TO CONTAIN A GREATER PER·
32.35. NCJ·5ts119t1
CENTAGE OF MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN THE PRESENCE
A CHROMOSOME SCREENING OF 100 INSTITUTIONALIZED MALE OF ADEQUATE INTELLIGENCE THAN THE GENERAL POPULATION < ,
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS IN THAILAND IS REPORTED, AND THE OF CHILDREN.
RESULTS OF SEVERAL CHROMOSOME SCRgENINGS OF DEVIANT
Sponlorlng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION,
MALES ARE COMPARED. AND WELFARE OFFICE OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY AND VQUTH
DEVELOPMENT, WASHINGTON PC 20203. ','
1111. CYTOGENIC STUDIES IN A MAXIMUM SECURITY HOSPI·
TAL. By J. MASTERSON, M. POWER, and E. O'BRIEN.
IRISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 10 FITZWILLIAM PLACE, 94. DEIJ"fQUENCY AND MINIMAL IRAIN I,)YSfUNCTIOH. 8y
DUBL,N, IRELAND. JOURNAL OF THE IRISH MEDICAL AS· L 'i'AANOPOL. PROFESSIONAL PRESS INC, 101 EAST
SOCIATION, V 63, N 400 (OCTOBER 1970). P S(\2·364. ONTARIO STREET, CHICAGO IL 60811. JOURNAL OF
NCJ·5688G LEARNING DISABIf.lTIE5, V 3, N 4 (APRIL 1970),P
200·207. NC.I-G700t
THIS STUDY INVESTIGATES THE PREVALENCE OF CYTOGENETIC
A SrUDY OF MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION AMONG MINORITY
ABNOFiMALITIES IN THE POPULATION OF AN IRISH MAXIMUM SEe
MALE Dcl.INQUENT DROPOUTS IS REPORTED.
CURITY HOSPiTAL··81 MALES AND 15 FEMALES.

Ot. DEFECTIVE DEl.INQUENCY MOVEMENT-A HISTORV OF


115. DELINQUENCY AND VIOLENCE FROM THE VIEWPOINT Of
CRIMINOLOGY (FROM NEURAL DAtSO Of VIOLENCE AND
THE BORN Cf\IMINAL IN MEW YORK STATE. By N. F. AGGRESSION, 11178, 8Y W 8 FIELDa ANI) W H BWEET-
HAHN. 6~, p. 19711, NCJ·&e128 SEE NCJ-57620). By M. 1':. WOLFGANG. WARREN H
THE DEFECTIVE PELINQUENCY MOVEMENT, CHARACTERIZED BY GREEN. INO, 10 SOUTH aREN'TWOOD BOULEVARD, ST
ITS ATI'EMPTS TO EQUATE MENTAL RETARDATION AND CRIMI· LOUIS MO 63105. 35 p. 1975. NeJ.1I7521

8
------------------~----------------

of Criminality DIAGNOSIS

THIS SYMPOSIUM PAPER PRESENTS SOME IDEAS ABOUT MAN A DISCUSSION BY ~OCIAL SERVICE, MEDICAL, AND JUDICIAL PRO-
AND VIOLENCE IN GENERAL, CRIMES OF VIOLENCE, AND THE FESSIONALS OF TH~: AeLATIONSHIP BETWEEN LEARNING DIS.
SUBCULTURE OF VIOleNCE, AND THEN EXAMINES A LONGITUDI- ABiLiTIES AND ,JUVENILE DELINQUENCY IS PRESENTED.
NAl.. STUDY OF DELINQUENCY IN A BIRTH COHORT. SuPPttmental Notu: BASED ON A SYMPOSIUM 'YOUTH IN TAOU·
BLE' HELD IN SAN FRANCISCO, JANUARY 1977, AND SPON$ORED
96. DEUNOOENCY, PARENTAL PSVCHOPAllIOLOQV, AND BY THE ADOLESCENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE OF THE ASSOCIATION
FOR CHILDREN WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES. .
PARENTAl:. CRIMIHAUTV-CUNICAL AND EPID£i.AIOLOG·
ICAL FINDINGS. By D. O. LEWIS, D. BALLA. S. SHANOK. SponlOr/ng Aglney: ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDREN WITH LEARN·
8nd L. SNELL YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 92A YALE STA· ING DISABILITIES, 2200 BROWNSVILLE ROAD, PITTSBURGH PA
TION, NEW HAVEN CT 06520. JOURNAL OF THE AMERI· 15210.
CAN AG4DEMY OF CHILD PSYCHIATRY, V 15, N 3 AvailAbility: ACADEMIC THERAPY PUBLICATIONS. 1539 FOURTH
(SUMMER 1976j,'P 665-678. NOJ-5hB7 STREET, SAN RAFAEL CA 94901.
FOUR GROUPS OF PARENTS FROM CONNECTICUT WERE USED 102. DELINQUENTS ARE DISABLED-AN IHNOVAnVE AP-
TO EVALUATE CLINICA\. OBSERVATIONS THAT SEVERELY DIS· PROACH TO llIE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF JU-
TURBED PARENTS WILL HAVE CHILDREN WHO MANIFEST IN· VENILE DELINQUENCY-FINAL REPORT OF THE NEUR·
CREASeD $OCIAL DEVIANCE AND PSYCHIATRIC IMPAIRMENT. OPSYCHOLOGY DIAGNOSnc LABORATORY AT THE
RHODE ISLAND TRAIIIlING SCHOOLS. UNIVERSITY OF
8p0M0rfng AgerlCMS: 'CONNECTICUT GOVERNOR'S PLANNING RHODE ISLAND. 65 p. 1974. NCJ.18ea
COMMITTEE ON CRIMINAL ADMINISTRATION, 75 ELM STREET, FORTY-FIVE INCARCERATED JUVENILE DELINQUENTS AND "6
HARTFORD CT otI116; US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN· MATCHED CONTROLS WERE EXAMINED USING THE HALSTEAD
F.ORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION. NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL BATTERY TO INVESTIGATE THE OCCUR·
.. RENCE OF ADAPTIVE DISABILITY IN DELINQUENTS•
17.DEUNQUENCY, PSYCHOMOTOR EPILEPTIC SYMPTOMS, Sp:»nlOring Aglne'..: RHODE ISLAND DEPARTMENT OF COFl~\EC­
AND PARANOID IDEATION-A TRIAD. By D. O. LEWIS. TIONS, 75 HOWARD AVENUE, CRANSTONRI 02920i RHODE
AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, 1700 18TH ISLAND GOVERNOR'S COMMITTEE ON DELINQUENCY AND CRIMI.
STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20009. AMERICAN NAL ADMINISTRA'iION.
'JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 133, N 2 (DECEMBER Avall.blllty: NTIS.
1976), P 1395-1398. NCJ·56142
A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW OF THE RECORDS OF ALL JUVENILES 103. DEMONISM REVISITED-llIE XYX CHROMOSOMAL
WITH PSYCHOMOTOR EPILEPTIC SYMPTOMS REFERRED TO A JU· ANOMALY. By T. R. SARDIN Ind J. E. MILLER. UNI.
VERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY SCHOOL OF CRIMI·
VENILE COURT CLINIC OVER ~ 2·YEAR PERIOP IS REPORTED. NOLOGY, 101 HAVILAND HALL. BERKELEV CA 94120.
ISS/JES IN CRIMINOLOGY. V 5, N 2 (SUMMER 1970), P
... DEUNQUENCY, PULSE RAm AND EARLY EMOTIONAL 195·?,07. NCJ.08174
DEPRIVATION. 81 M. E. J. WADSWORTH. INSTITUTE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNAL CAUSALITY n!EORY
FOR THE STUDY AND TREATMENT OF DELINQUENCY, 11 OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AND ANALYSts OF CHROMO'..oMAL
NEW FETTER LANE, LONDON EC4 P4EE, ENGLAND. STUDIES CONCLUDES THIS APPROACH TO BE OF NO VAUlE.
BRITiSH JOURNA~ OF CRIMINOLOGY. V 16, N 3 (JULY
1976), P 245-256. NCJ·36a4S 104. DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF SOClI'jPATHV 8V
THIS sTUDY INVESTIGATEO THE THEORY THAT STRESS IN EARLY MEANS OF DRUGS-A SUMMARV REPOt'T. 8y'"
ClilLDHooD MAY CONTRIBUTE TO ATYPICAL AUTONOMIC ACTIVI· GOLDMAN, S. DINITZ, 1- liNDNER, T. FOm~j inti H.
ALLEN. OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PROGRAM FOR THE
TY WHICH OAN LATER BE USED TO DIFFERENTIATE eETWEEN STUDY OF ORIME AND DELINQUENCY, 1314 KINNEAR
OFFENDERS OF VARIOUS KINOS AND NON-OFFENDERS. ROAD, COLUMBUS OH 43212. 76. p. 1911,.
NCJ.1M32
n. DELINQUENT AND DISTURBED BEHAVIOR WlllIl" THE RESULTS OF A SERIES OF INVEStiGATIONS INTO THE SIOLOGI.
FIELD OF MENTAL DEFICIENCV. 01 It. SHAPIRO. IN· CAL AND BEHAVIOAAL ASPECTS OF ANTISOCIAL SOCIOPATHY.
TERNATIONAL PSYCHIATRY CLINIcs, V 6, N 3 (1968), P DEALING PARTICULARl,Y WITH DRUG TREATMENT OF AUTO.
76-90. NOJ·S7011 NOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM DYSFUNCTIONS WHICH MAY INSTI·
THIS PAPER REPORTS ON THE TAEATMENT OF MALE ADOLES- GATE SUCH DEVIANCE.
CENTS FOR BEHAVIORAL DISORDERS AND ARGUES THAT THERE Sponsoring Agtncl.s: US bEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN·
IS NO QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PATIENTS Of! LOWER FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE AOMINISTRA'fION; OHIO DEPART·
MENT OF ECONOMIC AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT. 30 EAST
AND HIGHER INTELLIGENCE. • BROAD STREET, 26iH FLOOR, COLUMBUS OH 43216; RAYMONO
JOHN WEAN FOUNDATION, POBOX 751. 347 NORTH PARK
100. DEUNQU!NT AND HI8 BRAIN. By T. C. N. GIBBENS. AVENUE, WARREN OH 44481.
ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE, 2 QUEEN ANNE STREET, Availability: NCJAS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
LONDON W1M oaR, ENGLAND. PROCEEDINGS OF THE
ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE, V 62, N 1 (JANUARY 105. DEVELOPMENTAL ANALVSIS OF EEG (ELECTROENCEPtf.
1069), P .67·59. NCJ·G8883 ALOGRAM) ABNORMAUTtES IN JUVENILE OEUNOUEN1'8.
POSSIBLE LINKS BETWEEN VARIOUS NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS
By M. AssAeL. R. I<OHEN'·RA%, lIfId fI. ALPERN. .PHYSI.
ClAN POSTGRADUATe PRESS, BOX 38293, MEMPHIS TN
AND HANDICAPS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF DEVIANT OR AG· 36138. DIS/tASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSrEM, V 28, N
GRESSIVE BEHAVIOR ARE DISCUSSED, AND THE IMPACT OF 1 (JANUARY 1007), P 49·54. • NCJ-H74,
SUCH DIAGNOSIS ON THE AOJublCATORY PROCESS IS NOTE;D, ELECTRO!:NCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) FINDjNIlS FOR 72 JUVENI~
DELINQUENTS AT A DIAGNOSIS AND oaSfiAVATION ceNTER IN
101. DEUNQUENT v~tmi AND WANING DISABILITIES, N. JERUSALEM, ISRAEL, ARt: REPORTEP,
. P. RA-. Ed. ASSOCiATION FOR CHILDREN WITH
. LEARNING. DISABILITIES, ~oo BI~OWNSVILLE RoAD, 1oe. DIAGNOSIS Of SPECIFIC L£AfJNING OIeA.'urlES IN ,A
PITTSaURGH PA16210:, BOYS TOWN CENTER FOR THE JUVENILE DEUNQUENT POPilLAT.lON, ltv J. .W..
STUDY OF YOUTH QEVEI..OPMENT, BOYS TOWN NE. 79 PODbOY and. W. A. MALLORY. ADMINISTRATIVe OFFICe
,p. 1978, , HC.....6tie:i OF THE UNITED STATes COU~TS, SUPRgME COURT

9
\' .!
DIAGNOSTIC The Etiology'

BUILDING, WASHINGTON DC 20544. FEDERAL PROBA· SEVENTEEN JUVENILES WERE TREATED WITH DIPHENYLHYAN-
TlON. V 42, N 3 (SEPTEMBER 1978j, P 26-3~. TOIN FOR 0 WEEKS TO DETERMINE THE DRUG'S EFFECTIVENESS i.
NCJ.&2114 IN DECREASING THE FREQUENCY AND SEVERITY OF TEMPER
THE APPLICATION OF A LEARNINI3 DISABILITY DIAGNOSTIC BAT· TANTRUMS IN CHILDREN SUSPECTED OF MINIMAL BRAiN DYS-
TERY TO A RAI\lDOMIZED SAMPLE OF JUVENILE DELINQUENTS TO FUNCTION.
IDENTIFY LEARNING DISABILITIES IS REPORTED.
AvallablUty: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM. 113. DYSLEXIA AND DEUNQUENCY-A NEW DYSLEXI
SCREENING TEST. By N. D. RIZZO. ASSOCIATION F
107. DIAGNOSTIC EVALUAnON OF COMMITTED DEUN- PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT OF OFFENDERS, 199 G •
QUENTS (FROM YOUTH IN iROUBLE-A SYMPOSIUM, CESTER PLACE, LONDON NW1 6BU, ENGLAND. INTER·
MAY 2·3 1874 BY BETTY LOU KRATOVIu.E-SEE NATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THERAPY AND C0M-
NCJ.3&802). By R. E. COMPTON. ACADEMIC THERAPY PARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY, V 19, N 2 (1975), P 1S..1n.
PUBLICATIONS, 1639 FOURTH STREET, SAN RAFAEL CA NCJ-2M80
94901. 13 p. 1974. NCJ.3IlDC4 THIS ARTICLE REVIEWS THE CAUSES OF DYSLEXIA (A LEARNING
THE SPEAKER REPORTS THE HISTORY AND RESULTS OF A DISABILITY INVOLVING DIFFICULTY IN LEARNING TO R!:AD), DIS-
STUDY CONDUCTED IN THE COLORADO YOUTH SERVICES' DIAG· CUSSES THE RELATIONSHIP OF DYSLEXIA AND JUVENILE DEUN·
NOSTIC RECEIVING CENTER WHICH SHOWS THAT A GREAT MA· QUENCY, AND OUTLINES A DYSLEXIA SCREENING TEST. ,I
JORITY OF THE DELINQUENTS STUDIED SUFFERED FROM LEARN·
ING DISABILITIES. 114. DYSLEXIA, SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABIUTY AND DEUN-
QUENCY. By W. MULUGAN. NATIONAL COUNCIL OF
108. DIET FOR REHABIUTAnON. By B. D'MARO. MORRIS JUVENILE AND FAMILY COURT JUDGES, BOX 8970, UNI·
COUNTY OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF, COUNTY COURT· VERSITY OF NEVADA, RENO NV 89507. JUVENILE JUS-
HOUSE, MORRISTOWN NJ 071150. 13 p. 1974. TICE, V 23, N 3 (NOVEMBER 1972), P 20-24.
NCJ-12834 NCJ.07537
EXPLANATION OF THE BEHAVIOR·PRODUCING EFFECTS OF LOW DISCUSSION OF DELINQUENT CHILDREN WHO HAVE DEFECTIVE
BLOOD SUGAR (HYPOGLYCEMIA) WITH SUGGESTIONS FOR LANGUAGE ACHIEVEMENT IN READING, WRITING, AND SPELLING.
CHANGING JAIL DIETS TO MINIMIZE HYPOGLYCEMIA AMONG IN·
MATES. 115. ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT
OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS. L J. HIPPCHEN, Ed.
SponlOrlng Agency: NEW JERSEY STATE LAW ENFORCEMENT VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET,
PLANNING AGENCY, 3535 QUAKER BRIDGE ROAD, TRENTON NJ NEW YORK NY 10001. 416 p. 1978. NCJ.&0444
08825.
DEVELOPMENTS IN THE STUDY OF ENVIRONMENTAL AGENTS
1ot. DIET·VITAMIN PROGRAM FOR JAIL INMATES.! B. (FOODS, CHEMICAL FUMES, DRUGS, .CONTAMINANTS) AND
D'ASARO, C. GROESBECK, and C. NIGRO. ACADE Y OF CHEMICAL IMBALANCES IN THE BRAIN AS CAUSES OF DELlN·
ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY,2231 BROAD S' EET, QUENCY AND CRIME·RELATED BEHAViORAL DISORDERS ARE 00.
REGINA, SASKATCHEWAN, CANADA S4P 147. J 'RNAL CUMENTED.
OF ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, V 4, N 3 (1 75), P Availability: VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET,
212·222. NCJ-I&5G7& NEW YORK NY 10001.
TWENTY·FIVE INMATES OF A COUNTY JAIL PARTICIPATED IN AN
8·WEEK TREATMENT AND MIXED TREATMENT AND PLACEBO 118. ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOA
STUDY OF THE REHABILITATIVE EFFECTS OF DIET EDUCATION, (FROM ECOLOGIC·BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO
DIET CHANGE AND VITAMIN SUPPLEMENTATION. TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1871, IIY
LEONARD J HIPPCHEN SEE NCJ-50444). By W. If. PHIL-
110. DIFFERENTIAL f:LECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC PAT· POTT. VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 4GO WEST 33RD
TERNS OF ADOLESCENT MALE PRISONERS, A SUMMARY STREET, NEW YORK NY 1000t 22 p. 1978.
OF THE PREUMINARY REPORT. By R. T. OSBORNE. NCJ-1I041SO
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 25 p. 1988, NCJ-otDCI1 THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MALADAPTIVE. REACTIONS TO
RESEARCH ON THE RELATIONSHIP OF EEG FREQUENCIES TO AB· FOODS AND CHEMICALS AND PSYCHOTIC OR BIZARRE BEHAVIOR
NORMAL BEHAVIOR, FOR USE IN EXPANDING PSYCHOLOGICAL ARE EXAMINED. TESTING FOR FOOD ALLERGY IS RECOMMENDED
EVALUATION IN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PROGRAM. AS A STANDARD PROCEDURE IN PSYCHIATRIC EXAMINATION.
Sponaorlng Agency: GEORGIA DIVISION OF VOCATIONAL REHA·
BILITATION, 47 TRINITY AVENUE, SW, ROOM 610-8, ATLANTA GA 117. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) ABNORMALITIES AS A
30334. CORRELATE OF BEHAVIOR IN ADOLESCENT MALE DE-
LINQUENTS. By S. D. LOOMIS. AMERICAN PSYCHIAT·
111. DIFFERENTIAL OUTCOMES AMONG MISDEMEANANT RIC ASSOCIATION, 1700 18TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON
PROBATIONERS THROUGH THE USE OF ORnWMOLECU· DC 20009. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V
LAR APPROACHES AND CASEWORK/COUNSEUNO. By 121, N 10 (APRIL 1985), P 1003·1008. NCJ.5e740
A. G. SCHAUss. 39 p. 1978. NCJ·1l4024 ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) READINGS AND PSYCHOLOGI.
A SAMPLE OF 102 MISDEMEANANT PROBATIONERS WAS USED IN CAL EVALUATIONS FOR 150 MALE DELINQUENTS AT THE IWNOIS
A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE UTILITY OF ORTHOMOLECU· ('TATE TRAINING SCHOOL FOR BOYS ARE ANALYZED.
LAR_ VERSUS CONVENTIONAL CASEWORKICOUNSELING AP·
PROACHES TO REDUCING RECIDIVISM 11'1 WASHINGTON STATE. 118. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND RORSCHACH
FINDINGS IN A GROUP OF JUVENILE DEUNQUENTS sus-
~ntal Not..: PRESENTED AT THE 1978 ANNUAL MEETING
PECT OF ORGANIC BRAIN DISORDER. By R.
OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CF:iMINOLOGV, DALLAS, TEXAS, KOHEN·RAl and M. ASSAEL. SCHWABE AND COMPANY,
NOVEMBER 19~0. . STEINENTROSTRASSE 13, 4010 BASEL, SWITZERLAND.
Availability: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM. ACTA PAEDOPSYCHIATRICA, V 33, N 8 (AUGUST 11l6e), P
251·258. NCJ-8171t1
1it DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN IN CHILDREN WITH SEVERE ELECTROt:NCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) READINGS, OeSERVATIONAL
TEMPER TANTRU~. By A. LOOKER and C. K. CON- DATA, AND RORSCHACH (INK BLOT) TEST PERFORMANCE ARE
NERS. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 635 NORTH
DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO IL 80610. ARCHIVES OF EXAMINED IN A STUDY OF 19 MALE JUVENILE DELINQUENTS SUS-
'~.fiENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 23 (JULY 1970), P 00.09. PECTED OF HAVING ORGANIC BRAIN DISORDERS.
,. : . NcJ·&1lO83 Sponaorlng Agency: ISRAEL MINISTRY OF SOCIAL WELFARE.

10
"

of Criminality EPILEPSY.

118. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND SEX CHROMO- AN OVERVIEW IS PROVIDED OF CONTEMPOFIARY PHYSIOLOGICAL
SOME ABNORMAunES. By G. W. FENTON, T. G. TEN· RESEARCH AND THEORY ON THE NATURE OF PSYCHOPATHY,
NENT, K. /4. COMISH, and N. RATTRAY. HEADLEY BROS WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON THE CORRELATES OF 'ELEC-
LTO, ASHFORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH TRODERMAL AND CARDIOVASCULAR ACTIVITY.
JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, (1971), P 185-190.
NCJ-55OI4
126. ELECmOENC~L0GRAM8 IN, PSVCHOPAn41C . . .
INITIAL FINDINGS ARE PROVIDED FROM A COMPARATIVE STUDY SONAUTY AND IN MURDERERS (FROM APPLICATIONS
OF ABNORMAL ELECTROENcEPHALoGRAMS (SEG) IN PATIENTS OF ELECTROENCEPHAl.OORAPHY IN PSYCHIATRY, 1115,
WITH SEX CHROMOSOME IRREGULARITIES AND A GROUP OF BY WIWAM P WILSON). ByJ. n. KNOn. LAW
MATCHED CONTROLS WITH NORMAL CHROMOSOME COMPLE· REFORM COMMISSION OF AUSTAAUA, 99 ELIZABETH
MENTS. STREET, SYDNEY, NSW. AUSTRAUA. 11 p. 1965.,'
NCJ.I5I47'
120. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) STUDY OF OEUN- DATA RELATING ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC (EEG) ABNCiR;
QUENT ADOLESCEHTS WITH REFERENCE TO RECIDIVISM MALITIES TO PSYCHOPATHIC PERSONALITIES AND MURDERERS
AND MURDER. By Y. KIDO. JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR ARE REVIEWED IN THIS SURVEY OF EEG RESEARCH FROM 1842
PSYCHIATRY AND NEUROLOGY. CIO TOKYO BUNKO, THROUGH THE EARLY 1980'S.
2·28·21 HONKOMAGOMS, BUNKYO-KU, TOKYO ~ 13,
JAPAN. FOLIA PSYCHIATRICA ET NEUROLOGICA JA. 127. ENURESIS, FIRE SETTING, AND ANIMAL CRUI!LYV IN
PONICA, V 27, N 2 (1977). P 71-84. NCJ.5f815 MALE ADOLESCENT DElJNQUENT8-A mlAD PREDH:-
AN ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) STUDY IS MADE OF 188 TlVE OF VIOLENT DEHAVIOR. By D. WAX and V.
MALE JUVENILE DELINQUENTS WITH REFERENCE TO RECIDIVISM HADDOX. JOURNAL (JF PSYCHIATRY AND LAW, V 2, N
AND MURDER AND THEIR RELATION TO 14 AND 8/SEC SPIKE PAT· 1 (SPRING 1974), P 45-~i I.. NCJ.H4OI
TERNS, 8/SEC WAVES, AND LOW PENTAMETHVLENETETRAZOL USING SIX CASE STUDIES OF- AGGRESSIVE·VIOLENT MALE AD0-
THRESHOLDS. LESCENTS, THIS PAPER EXAMINES AND CONFIRMS THE TRIAD
HYPOTHESIS THAT ENURESIS. FIRE SETTING, AND ANIMAL CRU·
121. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) STUDY OF pELINo ELTY ARE HIGHLY PREDICTIVE OF,ADULT MALE VIOLENCtt'
QUENT AND NONDEUNQUENT ADOLESCENTS. By d. M.
WIENER, J, G. DELANO, and D. W. KLAss. AMERICAN 121. ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC FACTORS IN PlYCffO.
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, PATHOLOO't AND CAIMINALITY. Jy a. HUTCHING8.
CHICAGO IL 60610. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIA· 130 p. 1972. Denmark. NCJ411SM
TRY, V 15, N 2 (AUGUST 1966). P 144-150.
NCJ·150731 A RETROSPECTIVE INVESTIGAllON OF REGISTERED CRIMINALITY I,

AMONGST ADOPTEES AND THEIR ADOPTIVE AND BIOLOGICAL


ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) READINGS FOR DELINQUENT RELATIVES. '
AND NONDELINOUENT ADOLESCENT MALES ARE COMPARED.
Silpt)lemer\tal Not..: UNIVERSITY OF LONOON-MASre.RS
THESIS.
122. EFFECT OF A VISUAL TRAINING PROGRAM ON JUVENILE
DEUMOUENCV. By A. T. DOWIS, AMERICAN OPTO· SportlOl'f/lfl Apncy: US OEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
METRIC ASSOCIATION. 7000 CHEPPEWA STREET. ST AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, 5lIOO
LOUIS MO 83119. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN opro- FISHERS LANE, ROCKVILLE, MD 2085;?
METRIC ASSOCIAnON, V 48, N 9 (SEPTEMBER 1977), P
1173.1176. NH:J-4543t 128. ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN AND THE PREVENTION OF lIE-
RESUL1S 'OF A STUDY TO DEMONSTRATE A RELATIONSHIP BE· HAVIORAL DISQRDERS AND CRIMIHALITY (FROM eftlMl
PREVENTION 8TAATE~IE8 OF THEWS, 1174-A.
TWEEN VISION·RELATED LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE NCJ....2~). ,By C. n. JEFfERV. OHIO STATE ~NJVER­
DELINQUENCY ARE REPORTED. SITY PROGflAM FOR THE STUDY OF CRIMI: AND OELlN-
QUENCY, 1314 KINNEAR ROAD, C:OWMBUS OH <13212.
123. EFFECT OF BRAIN INJURY ON SOCIAL ADAPTABILITY. 18 p. 1974. • JfC,I-4t2H
By M. VIRKKUNEN, A. NUUTlLA, and 8. HUUSKO. ACTA ASPECTS OF A PREVENTIVE, AS OPPOSED TO A PUNITIVE/REHA·
PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVIOA, KR 348 MUNKSGMRD, BILITATIVE, EMPHASIS IN CRIMINOLOGY ARE OIJTl.INt:O, AND Ele-
NOERRE SOEGADE 35, DK·1310 COPENHAGEN, DEN·
MARK. ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, V 63 MENTS OF A MAN·ENVIRONMENT APPROACH TO UN[)I:RSTotND-
(1976), P 188·172. NCJ.3402I ING HUMAN BEHAVIOR ARE !X)NSIPERED..
THIS FINNISH STUDY TRIED TO CLARIFY SOCIAl. ADAPTABILITY AvalWllllty: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
~!
OF PERSONs WITH BRAIN INJURIES BY USING A LONG·TERM
CFlIMINAL DEVELOPMENT AS A CRITERION. 130. ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON CRIMINAL Mm¥ITY
IN KOREA. Qy D. H. CHANG. SAGE PUBLICATIONS;
INC. 275 SOUTH BEVeFiLY DRIVE, BEVERLY HI~LS,CA
124. EffECTS OF DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN ON DISAUPT1VE8E' 90212;' CRIMINOLoGY; V 10, N 3 (NOVEMBeR Hm!), P
HAVIOR STUDY OF MALE DELINQUENTS.. ,f:ly M. M. 338·35~. ftCJ007Uf
LEFKOWITZ. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 535 "I
STATISTICAL CORRELATIONS BETWEEN DiFFeRENt 'TY~$ OF
,",1

NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO IL 60610. AR·


CHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 20, N 6 (JUNE ORIMINAl. ACTIVITIES AND THE HOUR OF THE DAY, OUMATC, AND
1969), P 643-651. NCJ-65103 WEATHER CONDITIONS, SEASONAL CYCLE, AND DAY Of tHE
THIS STUDY INVESTIGATES THE EFFf:OTS OF DIPHENYLHYDAN· WEEK.
" ,
TOIN ON DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIOR IN A SAMPLE OF 200 MALE DE·
L1NQUENTS, PREPICTING THAT THE DRUG WILl.. REOUOE AG· 131, EPILEPSYANQ ,CRIMINALITY. IV It. iii. Lo ~.~
STEVENS AND SONS, 11 NEW 'FE11'E~ LANE, lONt1OM',
.
GRESSIVENESS, IRRITABILITY, AND OTHElR PFIOBLEM BEHAVIOR. ENGLAND; INSTITUTE FOR, THE $T\,lDV ,AND 'tReAT-,
MENT OF OELINQUENCV,.~ SURAEYSTREET,CRQVDENt
126. (!LECTROO£RMAL AND CARDIOVASCUW CORR!LATES SURREY CAO fF1~ UI<. ,8RITISH JOURNAL OF ~1M1N(Jt.. '
OF PSYCHOPATHY (FROM PSVCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- OGy, V 3,' N (J (JANU~RV 1063), P' '~~" "
APPROACHf,8 TO RESEARCH, 1078, 8'1 R D HAAE AND 0
8CHAWNG-SEE NCJ-1'I7500). BY R. D. HARE. JOHN
WRIGHT AND SONS, LTD, 42-44 TFlIANGLE WEST, BFlISTOL THIS REVIEW OF ReSEAf:lOHQN EPl~I:I'I AA~Ur:S' ~T It
BSS 1EX, ENGLAND. 37 p. 1978. Unltfld KIt'IIIdOm. SHOULD as REGAROeD /ltj'A MEDICAL, fi$\'dHl~:mIQ. QC¢A, ANi)
NCJ.1I71102 SIQNAL LEGAL PROBLEM, MAINLV WItHIN THE ~ 'oJI:'CI,l,I$8-
,.i<:
,I' ' .

11
,.
,',.
" "J
.' ',',
" '"
>••
•.
----~,~ ~- ..
--~-----~-~-------:------~~--:---

The EtiOlOgy

TICS, AND NOT AS A CRIMINOLOGICAL PROBLEM OF VITAL IM- BIOCHEMICAL PROBLEMS AS CAUSATive FACTORS IN CRIME AND
PORTANCE. DELINQtJENCY ARE DISCUSSED, AND BIOCHEMICAL TREATMENT
SuppIemontli, Notes: BAseo ON. PAPER 'PRESENTED AT THE 4TH STRATEGIES ARE DES(;RIBED,
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGICAL CONGRESS, THE HAGUE, SEP-
n;M~ER 5-12; 1960. 1~~. 18~AI!ILlSHING AN OPERAnON,~J.. t)EFjNITION Of JUV
Nli.:.! OEUHOUENCY. BV F. ;r. GREGURA8, P.
1~2. EPILEPSY. AUTOMATISM, AND CRIME. By J. GUNN and BRODER; '.net J.ZlMMERMAN. CREIGHTON INSTI E
Go FENTON. LITTLE BROWN AND COMPANY, 200 WEST FOR BUSINESS, LAW AND SOCIAL RESEARCH. 3 p.
STREET, WALTHAM MA 0211i4. LANCer. V 1 (JUNE 1978. N !U10
1971), P 1173·1176, NCJ·552t3 AN APPROACH TO THE OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF JUVENILE
THIS DISCUSSION OF THE POSSIBLE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DELINQUENCY, UNDERTAKEN IN THE CONTEXT OF A COMPLEX
EPILEPSY AND CRIME FOCUSES ON AN ENGLISH SURVEY OF EPI· RESEARCH EFFORT, IS DOCUMENTED.
LEPTIC PRISONERS AND A SAMPLE OF HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS ~tal Net.a: Ri:PORT NO 13.
SUFFERING FROM EPILEPSY.
,I
spontorlng AQency: Us DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN-
FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL INSTITUTE
133. EPILEPSY IN PRISONS-A DIAGNosTIC SURVEY. By J. OF JUVENILE JUSTICE & DELINQUENCY PREVENTION. WASHING·
GUNN. BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, BMA HOUSE, TION, DC 20531.
TAVISTOCK SQUARE, LONDON We1 H9JR, ENGLAND. AvallablHtt. NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, V 4 (NOVEMBER 6,1969), P
326-920. NCJ.58731
140. ETIOLOGY OF LEARNING DISABILmEs, DRUG ABUSE
,. THE INCIDENCE OF EPILEPSY AMONG BRITISH INMATES OF BOR- AND ilUVENILE DELINQUENCY (FROM
STALS AND PRISONS IS ASSESSED, AND POSSleLE LINKS BE- ECOLOOIc-8IOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO ~EATMENT
TWEEN EPILEPSY AND ANTISOCIAL ,BEHAVIOR ARE CONSIDERED. Of DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALs, 1010, BY LEONARD J
HIPPCHEN~SEE NCJ.504~). By A. corr. VAN NOS·
134. EPlLEPTICAUTOMA71SM AND VIOLENCE. By S. J. TRAND REINHOLD, 460 WEST 33RD STREET, NEW YORK
KNOX. SWEET AND MAXWELL, 11 NEW FETTER LANE, NY 10001. 14 p. 1978. NCJ.5CI448
LONDON, ENGLAND. MEDICINE SCIENCE AND THE LAW, THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EARLY LEARNING DISABILITIES,
V 0, N 2 (APAIL 1068), P'96-104. NCJ·seeDO OFTEN FOUND WITH HYPERACTIVE BEHAVIOR, AND LATER DE·
CERTA1N ASPECTS OF EPILEPTIC AUTOMATISM ARE EXPLORED LINQUENCY OR PRUG DEPENDENCY IS DISCUSSED, THIS PAPER
W,TH EMPHASIS ON ASSESSING THe DURATION OF AUTOMATISM, EXAMINES SOME POSSIBLE BIOLOGICAL CAUSES.
THE FREQUENCY OF VIOL'ENT BEHAVIOR, AND THE NATURE OF
VIOLENCE ASSOCIATED WITH AUTOMATISM. 141. EVALUATION OF ORGANIC FACTORS IN PAnENTS WITH
IMPULsE DISOAI)EAS AND EPISODIC VIOLENCE (FROM
13&. EPILEPTIC MURDERER,
By E. PODOLOSKY. DRAM· ISSUES IN BRAIN/BEHAVIOR CONTRO!., 107e, BV W L
RITE PRINTERS LTD, H!9 LONG LANE; LONDON SE1 4PH, SMITH. AND A KUNG SEE NCJ·51487). By F. R. ERYIN.
ENGLAND. MEDICO-LEGAL JDURNAL, V 15, N 4 (1962), SPECTRUM PUBLICATIONS. INC, 76-31 192ND STREET.
P 178-177. NCJ.58134 FLUSHING NY 11366. 10 p. 1976. NCJ.57.cet
CASE STUDIES AND RESEARCH INDICATING THAT SOME MUR· A PSYCHIATRIST DISCUSSES HIS WORK WITH PATIENTS WHO,
DERS MAY BE SUBSTITUTES FOR EPILEPTIC CONVULSIONS ARE COMPLAINING OF IMPULSE DISORDERS RESULTING IN EPISODIC
DISCUSSED. VIOLENCE, ADMITTED .THEMSELVES TO A CLINIC. THEIR PROB·
LEMS AND THOSE OF SELECTED PRISON INMATES APPEAR RE·
, 131. EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-A sTuDY OF 130 VIOLENT PA· LATED. .
TlENTS. By G. BACH-Y-RIT~ J, R. LION. C. E. CUMENT.
and F. R. EAVIN. AMERIOAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCI· 142. EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAL INTERACTION RESEARCH·THE
ATION 1200 17TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20036. INTERPLAY OF SOCIOENVIRONMENTAL AND INDIVIDUAL
AMER}CANJOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 127, N 11 (MAY FACTORS IN THE £TlOLooV Of CRIMINAL egHAVIOR
1~71), P 147S·t478. NCJ·55215 (ffior.iJ BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL e~HAVIOR. BY S
A 2·YEAR SrUDY OF 130 CLINIC PATIENTS WHOSE MAJOR COM· A IrQEDNICK--SEE NCJ.47215). . By S. A. MEDNICK, L
PLAINT WAS OUTBURSTS OF VIOLENT BEHAVIOR, USUALLY AS- KIRKEGAARD-SOREHSEN. S. ttlJTCHING8, J. KNOP, R. I;
SOCIATED WITH ASSAULTS ON OTHER PERSONS, IS REPoRTED. ROSENBERG. lind F. SCHULSINGER. GARDNER PRESS,
INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW YORI( NY 10003. 15
IuPPllMMi'ltal Not.a: READ AT THE 123RI) ANNUAL MEETING OF p. 1977. NCJ..72te
TH"E' AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIAT.ION, 'SAN FRANCISCO, THE DISTINGUISHING PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS OR EXPERI·
CALIFORNIA, MAY 11-15,1970. ',I
ENCES OF THE LAW·ABIDING PERSON RAISED IN A CRIMINAL
137. EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-DEFINmONS. DESCRIPTIONS, FAMILY AND THOSE OF THS CRIMINAL RAISED IN A CRIME·fREE
, AND MEASUREMENT (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN Ao- FAMILY MILIEl:ARE RESEARCHED.
GAEUtVI!. CRIMINALs, 1078. BY RUSSELL R YONROE- sponeoHng AGency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH. EDVCATION,
HE NC,I.U110). Iy G. U. BALIS .nd M. MCDONALD. AND WELFARE NAllONAL INST OF MENTAL HEALTH CENTER FOR
HJ:ATH LEXINGTON BOOKS, 1.26 SPRING STREET, LEXING· STUDIES OF CRIME AND DELINQUENCY, WASHINGTON, DC 20203.
'rON MA 021'13. 15 p. 1979. NCJ·53120
IN 8t,JPPORT 9F. A VALIDATION STUDY OF A TWO·DIMENSIONAL 143. EXTRA Y CHROMOSOME AND DEVIANT BEHAVIOR-A
METHOD F9R CLASSIFYING AGGRESSIVE CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, A BIBLIOGRAPHY. By R. G. COX. UNIVERSITY OF TO-
TH~ORVOF EPISODIC BEHAVIORAL OISOROER WAS REVIEWED, RONTO CENTRE OF CRIMINOLOGY, TORONTO, CANADA.
." ALON~ WITHPSVCHOLOGICAt. MEASURE!? OF,DYSCONTROL BE· •
21 p. 1970. canada. ffCJ.01et1S
HAVIOFt' BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE GENETIC INQUIRY INTO THE XV'( CHRO·
MOSOMAL ABNORMALITY AND ITS RELATION TO OEVIANT SOCIAL
1at. 'ili'All,.IlJHlHG .. PRoof'A" FOR THI! CHEMICALLY DE· BEHAVIOR,
; .\.·iII~Nt OfIftENDER'~OM AMER~AN CORRECTIONAL
. . AIiOCIATlOM PJK)CEEQINQ8 Of: 'tHE 108TH ANNUAL 144. EYSENCK'S 'THEORV OF CRIMINAUT'i-A NEW AP'
. :COMGRE$S OF 'COR"ECTtQN8.,t74-SEE "~"46). PROACtt. • S, P., K. BURGESS. FRED B ROTHMAN,
!Iv M. p, IiAWQffflf. AMERICAN COF\RECTIPNAL ASSO, 10368 W'CENTENNIAL RD, LITTLETON CO 60123. BRIT·
b~!'ONI '''321 \iARlWIC1( ROAD~ COl.LEGE PARK MD ISH. JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, V 12, N 1 (JANUARY
. 201"'0. 3 p.. i9'10. NCJ..40155 1972), P 74-82.' NCJ.0453.

12
. "
'-,',..-.:. .> ••
,
~ •• ', •
of Criminality GENETIC

EXPERIMENT WHICH TESTED THE VALIDITY OF EYSENCK'S HY· TYPE, HEIGHT, AND ADMISSION TO INSTITUTIONS FOR JUVE·
POTHESIS THAT MANY CRIMINALS HAVE NEUROTIC, EXTRAVERT· NILES.
ED PERSONALITIES AND POOR CONDITIONING RESPONSES.
151. FREQUENCIES OF INDIVIDUALS WITH EXCESS
145. FACTORS Of DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN MENTAL PATIENTS. SEX-CHROMOSOf,lES AMONG MENTALLV RETARDED,
BV J. M. MULLEN. 293 p. 1975. HCJ.56H4 MENTALLY IL~ DELINQUENT, AND CRIMINAL POPULA-
THIS EXPLORATORY STUDY USES MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS TO TiONS. SV A. MAKA. JAPANESE ASSOCIATION OF
EXAMINE TWO ISSUES: THE EXTENT OF DEVIANCE AND VID- CRIMINOLOGY, TOKYO MEDICAL ANO DENTAL UNIV,
1.CHOME, YUSHIMA, BUNl<Y().f(U, fOKYO 113, JAPAN.
LENCE AMONG EX·MENTAL PATIENTS AND FACTORS INFLUENC- ACTA CRIMINOLOGIAE ET MEOICINAE LEGALIS JAPONICA,
ING THIS DE"IANCE OR VIOLENCE. v 42, N 3 (JUNE 1978), P 77·96. NCJ.38012
SUpplemental Hotell: SPECIAL PRICES AVAI!.ABLE FOR ACADEMIC REVIEW OF STUDIES CARRIEO OUT IN JAPAN AND COMPARISON
INSTITUTIONS NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY AT RA· OF THE RESULTS WITH STUDIES PERFORMED IN OTHER COUN-
1/ LEIGH-DOCTORAL THESIS.
TRIES.
Availlblllt)': UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS, 300 NORTH ZEES ROAD,
ANN ARBOR MI48106. Stock Order No. 76-2418. (Microfiche) 152. FROM PHRENOLOGY TO PSYCHOSURGERY AND BACK
AGAIN BIOLOGICAL STUDIES OF CRIMINALITY. DV A. J.
1415. FOLLOW-UP STUDIES OF JUVENILE ,VIOLENT OfFEND- NASSI elld So I. AE:RAMOWrrz. AMERICAN ORTHOPSY·
ERS-WEST GERMANY. (KATAMNI!SEN JUGEND- CHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, 1'175 BROADWAY, NEW YORK NY
LlCHEA GEWALTDELlHQUENrEN.) Bv H. STUnE and R. 10019. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ORTHOPSYCHIATRY,
WALTER. CARL HEYMANNS VERLAG, GEREONSTR V 46. N 4. (OCTOBER 19761. P 591-607. NCJ.45010
18·32,5 COLOGNE 1, WEST GERMANY. MONATSCHRIFT
FUER KRIMINOLOGIE UNO STRAFRECHTSREFORM. V A CRITICAL REVIEW OF BIOLOGICAL THEORY AND RESEARCH
59. N 6 (DECEMBER 1976). P 309-320. (III GermtJn) INTO BIOLOGICA1. CORRELATES OF CRIMINALITY, BOTH PAST
NCJ-311348 AND PRESENT, REVEALS A CONTINUITY OF METHODOLOGICAL
THIRTY·FOUR OF A TOTAL OF 58 PERSONS UNDERWENT A FLAWS.
FOLLOW UP MEDICAL HISTORY EXAMINATION AS PART OF A AveUablllt)': SACRAMENTO MEDICAL CENTER DEPAR1MENT OF
PROJECT SUBSIDIZED BV THE DEUTSCHE PSYCHIATRY CIO ALBERTA J NASSI, 2315 STOCKTON BOULE-
FORSCHUNGSGEMEINSCHAFT (DFG: GERMAN SOCIETY OF RE· VARD, SACRAMENTO CA 95817.
SeARCH).
153. FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES IN E IE G'S (ELECmOENCEPH-
147. FORTYooSEVEN, XYY CHROMOSOMAL ABNOAMALITY-A ALOGRAM) OF A GROUP OF ZAliiliAN JUVENILE DEUN-
CRITICAL APPRAISAL WITH RESPECT TO ANT/SOCIAL QUENTS. (ANOMALIES FONCTIONUELLES DE L'E E G
AND VIOLENT BEHAVIOR (FROM ISSUES IN BRAIN/BE- CHEZ·UN GROUPE DE DELINOUAN'TS JUVENILES ZAJR-
HAVIOR COHTRO~ 1H7, BY W L SMITH IMD A KLlNE- OIS.) By H. J. CLARY§E. UNIVERSITE CATHOLIQUE
SEe NCJ-57467). By So A. SHAH. SPECTRUM PUBLICA· DE LOUVAIN, DE CROYLAAN 54, 3030 HEVERLEE. LOU·
TIONS, INC, 75·31 192ND STREET, FLUSHING NY 11366. VAIN, BELGIUM. CAHIE/'IS DE CRIMINOLOGIE ET DE
19 p. 1916. NCJ.57469 PATHOLOGIE SOCIALE, V 1, N 7 (1974), P 75-69. (In
French) NCJ.....127
AVAILABLE EVIDENCE ON XYV CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES
RESULTS OF A STUDY ON ZAIRIAN MALE DELINQUeNTS SHOWED
AND THEIR ROLE IN VIOLENT AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR ARc
THAT SIGNIFICANT LEVELS OF ABNORMAL RHYTHM WERE PRES.
REVIEWED, AND IT IS ARGUED THAT GENE STUDIES HAVE NOT
ENT IN THEIR E.E.G.'S, SUGGESTING THA, BRAIN DYSFUNCTION
ESTABLISHED THE EXTRA V'S ASSOCIATION WITH DEVIANCE.
OR LACK OF MATURATION PLAYs A PART IN THEIR DELINQUEN-
1411. FORTY-SEVEN, XVV MALE-A REVIEW. By D. R. OWEN.
CY.
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 1200 17TH
STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20038. PSYCHOLOGICAL 154. FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES OF THE ELECTROENCEPHALO-
BULLETIN, V 78, N 3 (SEPTEMBER 1972), P 209·233, GRAM AMONG NORMA~ PSYCHONEUROTIC OR DELIN-
NCJ-55819 QUENT ADOLESCENTS ~ ATTEMPT AT OIFF~ENTIAL
CLASSIFICATION BY STATISTICAL ANALystS-FRANCE.
BASED ON A DECADE OF INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH EFFORTS DEAL. (ANOMALIES FONCTIONNELLES . DE
/11,
ING· WlrH ABNORMAL CHROMOSOME COMPOSITIONS, REPORTS L'ELECTAO£NC~PHALOGFIAMME CHEZ LEt! ADOLEI-
l OF MALES WITH 47,XVY CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT ARE RE· CE~TS NORMAU~ CARACTERIELS au OlalNQUAIiTS
VIEWED IN TERMS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PHVSICAL VARIA· ESSAI DE CLASSfICATION DIFFEAENTIELL.E PARANA~
BLES. LYSE STATISTIQU£') By G. VERDEAUX, Y.CHIAO~ IfId
J. SELOSSE. CENTRE DE FORMATION ET DE RE-
149. fORn-SEVEN, XYY MAU: WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO CHERCHE DE t,'EDUCATION SURVEILu:e; 54, RUE DE
BEHAVIOR. By W. H. PRICE lind P. A. JACOBS. SEMI· GARCHES, VAUCRESSON. ANNALES DE VAUCRt;S$ON,
NARS IN PSYCHIATRY. V 2. N 1 ,(FEBRUARY 1970), P N 2 (1964), P 133·190. (In FrenCh) . NGJ402116
30.39. NCd-568G7 REPORT ON A STUDY, USING THE ELECTROENCEPHALOORAM,
THE STATUS OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE 47,XYY MALE IS RE· OF A GROUP OF 105 FRENCH. MALE JUVENILE OELINQUENTS
VIEWED WITII EMPHASIS ON THE FREOUENCY WITH WHICH SUCH AND A CONTROL GROUP OF 105 MALE STUOENTS AT AN OCCU-
MEN AfiE FOUND IN BOTH NORMAL POPULATION~ AND SUB· PATIONAL SCHOOL
GROUPS DEFINED BY ANTiSOCIAL BEHAVIOR OR MENTAL DisOR·
DER. 155. GENETIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS IN ASCC::IAL
BEHAVIOR. By S. A, MEDNICK ..xl" B, MUTCHING&.
150. FOATY-sEVEN, '1.YY SYNDROME, HEIGHT AHD YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 0211 VALE STATION, NEW
INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF JUVENILE DELINQUENTS. HAVEN cr 06520. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADE·
By D. S. eORGAOfl\KAR, W. M. UNGER, S. M. MOORE. and MY OF CHILD PSYCHIATRY, V 17, N 2, SpeCIAL Issue
T. A. CROFTON. HEADLEY BROS LTD, ASHFORD, KENT (SPRING 1978), P 209·223. NCJ-50340
TNl!48HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIA· TWIN AND ADOPTION INVESTIGATIONS ARE's'UMMAAltEOtt1AT
TRY, V 120, N 558 (MAY 1972), P 549·550. SUGGEST THE POSSIBILITY OF HEREOITARV PREDISPOSITIONA\.
NCJ-S7016 INFLUENCES ON THE PROBABILITY OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR.
THE HEiGHTS OF 1,084 JUVENILE OELINQUENT MALES WERE
MEASURED ANC THEIR CHFIOMOSOMES CHECKEO. TO DETER· 156. GENETIC COFIRELATES OF ANTISOCIAL SYNQAOMQ
MINE IF A RELATIONSHIP eXISTS BETWEEN THE 47.XVY KARVO· (FROM PSYCHOPATH-A COMPREHENSIVE STUOY. 01'

13
GENETIC The' Etl~ogy

, . ANTISOCIAL DISORDERS AND BEHAViORS,'1111I,BY WIL· 183. HEIGHT AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR IN XVANP XYY
LI~ H REID-SEE NCJ.S7E10). By W. H. REID. BOYS. ByE. B. HOOK and D. So KIM. AMERICANA
6RUNNER/MAZEL. INC. 19 UNION SOUARE. NEW YORI< NV SOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE; 1 5
100(13. 14 p. - 1978. . NCJ.57518 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, NW. WASHINGTON 00 5.
SCIENCE. V 172, N 3980 (APRIL 1971). P 284-286'
THE VARIOUS APPROACHES AND RESULTS OF STUDIES ON GE·
NETIC CORFIELATESOF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR ARE DISCUSSED. . ~5428g
WITH SPECIFIC ATTENTION TO lWlN, ADOPTION, SEX, AND CHRO- TEST PROJECT IN lWO INSTITUTIONS RULES OUT CESSIVE
HEIGHT AS EXCLUSIVELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE EQUENCY
MOSOME RESEARCH.
OF DELINQUENCY AMONG XV'( INDIVIDUALS.
157. GENETIC -ENVIRONMENTAL INTERACTIONS AND ANTI·
SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAV· 164. HEIGHT AND SERIOUSNESS OF CRIME IN XYY MEN. By
lOUR-APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1078, BY R D HARE E. B. HOOK and K. M. HEALY. BRITISH MEDICAL ASSO-
AND D SCHALLING-SEE NCJ·57500). By' C. R. CLem· CIATION, BMA HOUSE. TAVISTOCK SQUARE. LONDON
INGER, T. REICH; and S. B. GUZE. JOHN· WRIGHT AND WC1 H9JR. ENGLAND. JOlJRNAL OF MEOICAL GENET·
SONS. LTD. 42.44 TRIANGLE WEST. BRISTOL BSS 1EX. ICS. V 14, N 1 (FEBRIJARY 1977), P 10·12.
N~56889
ENGLAND. 13 p. 1978. United Kingdom.
NCJ.57504 THE CASE HISTORIES OF XYY OFFENDERS IN lWO ENGLISH SEa
A MULTIFACTORAL MODEL OF DISEASE TRANSMISSION IS USED CURITY HOSPITALS WERE RANKED BY GRAVITY OF OFFENSE
TO DETERMINE THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF GENETIC ANI) AND CORRELATED BY OFFENDER HEIGHT IN ORDER TO·DETER·
FAMIUAL AND NONFAMIUAL ENVIRONMENTAL CONTRIBUTIONS MINE LINKS BETWEEN HEIGHT AND SERIOUSNESS OF CRIME.
TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR.
165. HEREDITY IN CRIMINALITY. By D. ROSENTHAl- SAGE
PUBLICATIONS. INC, 275 SOUTH BEVERLY DRIVE, BEVER·
1&8. GENETICS AND CRIME. By W. M. C. BROW. JOURNAL LV HILLS CA .90212. CRIMINAL JUSTICE ANO BEHAVIOR,
OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS-LONDON, V V 2, N 1 (MARCH 1975), P 3·21. NCJ.272G4
1, N 3 (APRIL 1967), P 311-318. " NCJ·S740S
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS FROM FAMILY STUDIES. lWlN STUD-
THIS PAPER REVIEWS FINDINGS OF STUD1ES'ON.GENETlC FAC- IES. AND ADOPTION STUDIES WHICH INDICATE THAT HEREDITY
TORS AND CRIME. INCLUDING THOSE ON XXV, XV/XXY, XXVY. FACTORS ARE IMPLICATED IN CRIMINALITY AS WELL AS:ENVI.
AND XYY MALES. RONMENTAL FACTORS.
1511. GENETICS AND CRIME-INTERNATIONAL SVMPOSIUM 168. HOMICIDES AND THE LUNAR CYCLE-TOWA~D A
ON CRIMINOLOGY, 2D-PROCEEDINGS, 1975. By G. THEORY OF LUNAR INFLUENCE ON HUMAN EMOnONAL
KAISER. INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR BIOLOGICAL DISTURBANCE. By A. I- LIEBER and C; R. .SHERIN. ,;
AND MEDICO-FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY. POBOX 22215. AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, 1700 18TH
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL 23 p•. 1975. Brazil. STREET. NW, WASHINGTON DC 20009. AMERICAN
NCJ·38892 JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 12.• N 1 (JULY 1972). P
THIS PAPER PROVIDES AN OVERVIEW OF THE STUDIES AND RE· 101·106~ • NCJ.2e028
SEAf\CH DONE ON THE RELATIONSHIF OF GENETIC FACTORS TO DATA ON HOMICIDES WERE ANALYZED BY COMPUTER TO DE·
. CRIME, FROM THE TURN OF THE CENTURY TO THE PRESENT. TERMINE WHETHER A RELATIONSHIP EXISTS BETWEEN THE
LUNAR SYNOOIC CYCLE AND HUMAN EMOTIONAL DISTURBANCE.
1Go. OeNETICs. ENVIRONMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY.
$. A. MEDNICK, F. SCHULSINGER, J.HIGGINS. and B. 167. HORMONES AND AGGRI!SSION (fROM NEURAL BASES
BELL, Ed.. NORTH·HOLLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY, OF VIOLENCE AND AGGRESSION, 1975, BY W 51 .FIELDS
JAN VAN GALENSTR 335. AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS. AND W H SWEET-SE" NCJ·57520). By C. W•.LLOYP.
360 p. 1974. Netherlands. NCJ.47448 WARREN H GREEN. INC, 10 SOUTH BRENlWooD BOULE·
THE REPORTS IN THIS ANTHOLOGV DEALWITH'EMPIRICAL STUD· VARD. ST LOUIS MO 63105; 42 p. 1916:
IES INTENDED TO ISOLATE GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FAC- NCJ·57521
TORS WHICH CONTRIBU1E TO MENTAL ILLNESS. PARTICULARLY THIS ARTICLE FROM THE SYMPOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIO·
SCHIZOPHRENIA. LENCE AND AGGRESSION REVIEWS THE STATE OF KNOWLEDGE
ON TESTOSTERONE SECRETION AND VIOLENce IN MALE IN· ;~ .
SUpplemental Not..: NORTH·HOLLAND· RESEARCH SERIES ON
EARLIf DETECTION AND PREVENTION OF BEHAVIOUR DlSOR· MATES, AND ANDROGEN INFLUENCES IN BRAIN FUNCTIONS,
DERS, VOLUME 1.
188. HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE EXTRA Y CHROMO-
AVlllablllty: eLSEVIER NORTH·HOLLAND, INC 52 VANDERBILT SOME-FACT OR FANTASY? By I- F. JAVIK, V. KLODIH,
AVeNue, NEW YORK NY 10017. and S. S. MATSUYAMA. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION, 1200 17TH STREIIT. NW, WASHINGTON DC
181. GENETICS OF HUMAN AGGRESSION. By S. KESSLER. G. 20036. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST,. V2f!, N f! (AUGUST
R. ELLIOT. and J. D.· BARCHAS. US DEPARTMENT OF 1973), P 674·682. NCJ·56387
HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTI· AN OVERVIEW IS PROVIDED OF ARGUMENTS LINKING AMRES·
TUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, 5600 FISHERS LANE, ROCK· SION AND AN EXTRA Y CHROMOSOMEj THAT IS, THAT A CHRO-
VILLE, MD 20852. PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY BULLETIN,
V 13. N 1 (JANUARY 1977), P 20·21. NCJ·58849 MOSOMAL ABERRATION IN SOME MENTALLY RErARDED MALE
CRIMINAI.S IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR VIOLENT BEHAVIOR
,THEPOSSISLE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN GENETIC FACTORS AND CHARACTERISTICS.
HUMAN AGGI!IESSION ARE BRIEFLY QISCUSSED IN LIGHT OF THE
Spontorlng Apncy:. US OEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION.
fiNDINGS OF TWINS RESEARCH, COMPARISONS INVOLVING AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CHILD HEALTH AND
AOOPTEES, AND XYY CHROMOSOME STUDIES. HUMAN DEVELOPMENT. 9000 ROCKVILLE PIKE. BETHESDA, MD
20014.
182. HANDBOOK OF CR'PA'NOLOGV. D. GLASER, Ed. 1193
p. 1974. NCJ·11548O 1119. HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE LUNAR SYNODIC CYCLE.
A COLLECTION OF READINGS DEALING WITH CRIMINOLOGICAL By A. L UEBER. 7 p. 1978, NCJ.49268
THEOf:!Y AND I'IESEARCH DATA ON ..THE INCIDENCE OF AGGRAVATED ASSAULT, SUICIDE,
. AVIIiibil!ty: nAND MCNALLY AND COMPANY, BOX 1600, CHICAGO TRAFFIC FATALITIES. AND PSYCHIATRIC EMERGENCY ROOM
ILe068Q. VISITS ARE EXAMINED IN A ST~Y OF THE RELATIONSHIP BE.

14
'.

"'i~Crlirilnlniy JUVENILE

TWEEN AGGRESsIVEIVIOLENT BEHAVIOR AND tHE PHASES cU: 1n."lNC1DENcE OF xV\' AND XXY INDIVIDUALS IN A SECU-
TijEMOON. . RITY tmPJrAL POPU1.AnON. By L. Eo DIE DAULT, E..
~~I HotH: REPRINTED FROM. JOURNAL OF CUNICAL .: . JOftHSTOH; 0iId P. LOEFFELHOLZ.. PHYSICIAN POST-
PSYCHIATRY. V 39. N 5 (MAY 1978). P 385-387. 39().393. GP.AQUATE PRESS. BOX 38293. MEMF:'US TN S8138~ . tJls;' .
eASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM, V 33. N 9 (SEPTJ:M-
A~ ARNOLD L LIEBER, 1444 BISCAYNE BOULEVARD. BER 1972), P 590-593. NCJ.585Q
SUtTE 301, MIAMI FL 33132.
INCiDENCE OF THE xYY AND xxv
CHROMOSOMAL DEFECTS IN
CONVIC,"TED FELONS ADMITTED TO THE IOWA SECURITY FACILITY
110: HYPERACTIVE CHILD SYNDROME-A PRECUR$OA OF
ADULT PSYCHOPATHY? (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEMAV- IS INVESTIG1.TEO USING THE HYPOtHESIS THAT THE INCIDENCE
IOUR ....APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 117" BY R D HARE WOULD BE GREATER THAN THAT FOR THE GENERAL POPULA·
AND D SC/fAWNO-SEE NCJ.57500). BY' J. H. SAmR- TlON.
FIElD. JOHN WRIGHT AND SONS. LTO, 42-44 TRIANGLE
WEST, BRISTOL BSS 1EX, ENGLAND. 1B' p. 1918. 171.' iNPORMAnON PROCa!SlNG DEFECTS IN DELINQUENTS
UhHed Kingdom.' NCJ.57501 (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO
THIS ARTICLE PRESENTS RESULTS OF CLINICAL, FAMILY. AND . mEATM~NT OF DEUNQUENTS AND CRIMINALS,1t78; BV
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC STUOIES OF HYPERACTIVE CHIL· LEONARD J HiPPCHEN SEE NCJ.50444). By s.. H.
SLAVIN. VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33fjD
DREN WHICH SUGGEST A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHILDHOOD STREET. NEW VORl< NY 10001. 28 p. 1978.
HyPERACTIVITY AND ADULT PSYCHOPATHY. NCJ.5044G
A SELECTED Lri1:RATURE REVIEW IS PRESENTED FROM VARIOUS
171. HYPERTENSION, BLoOD PRESSURE VARIABIUTY. AND FIELDS. STUDIES WHICH EMPHASIZE THE IMPORTANCE OF SKILL
JUVENILE DEUNQUENCV. By A. R. MAWSON. SOUTH·
ERN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 2601 HIGHLAND AVENUE. DEFECTS ARE REVIEWED. AND THREE SUCCESSFUL. REMEDIAl.
BIRMINGHAM AL 35205. SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL. PROGRAMS ARE DESCRIBED.
V 70, N 2 (FEBRUARY 1977), P 160-164. NCJ-54022
THIS PAPER DISCUSSES THE POSSIBLE ROLES OF HYPERTEN· 177. INTEWGENCE AND DELINQUENCY-A RECONSIDER-
SION AND BLOOD PRESS\,;;'E VARIABILITY AS JUVENILE' DEUN·
AnON. By N. M. PRENTICE and F. J. KELLY. JOURNAL
PRESS, BOX 543. 2 COMMERCIAL STREET, PROVINCE·
OUENCY FACTORS. THESE PHYSIOLOGICAL FACTORS AND TOWN MA 02857. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY;
SOCtAL STRESS MIGHT MAKE JUVENILES MORE AGGRESSIVE. V 60 (1963), P 327-337. • NCJ.58545
Avall8b!l!ty: A R MAWSON CITY COLLEGE LOYOLA UNIVERSITY. THE CONCLUSION OF A 1919 STUDY THAT NO D,EFINITI: RELA·
NEW ORLEANS LA 70118. ' . TIONSHIP EXISTS BETWEEN CRIMINALITY AND. LOW INTEllI·
172. IMPUCATIONS OF SEX DIFFERENCES i" THE PREVA-
LENCES OF ANliSOCIAL PERSONAUTY; ALcoHol:lSM.
GENCE IS REEXAMINE£) USING INTELqGENCE OUOTIENT (10)
SCORES OBTAINED FROM WECHSLER INTEllIGENC,E SCALES.
sPon-ortno'Agtney:MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF YOUTH
AND CRIMINALITY FOR FAMIUAL TRANSfiIISSION.By
C. R. CONING!R, K. O. CHRI5nANSON, T. REICH, and I. I. SERVICES. 294 WASHINGTON STREET. BOSTON. MA 02108.
oomSMA". AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 535
NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO IL 60610; 11 p. 17.. INTERVENTION WITH ilUVENILl DELfNQUENTS. (FROU
1978. ~54at ECOLOGIC-BIOCH£UICAL APPROACHES TO TfiEATHENT
USING THREE MULTIFACTORIAL MODELS OF DISEASE TRANSMIS-
OF DEUNQUENTS AfiD CRIMINALS, 1'71, BY LEOtiARD J
HIPPCHENSEE. NCJ.150444).· By ~ H. BACtfAflAIIlnd W.
SION If)! WHICH THE PREVALENCE OF DIS~SE DIFFERS BE· R. LAMD. VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD,450WEST 33RD
TWEEN'MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING, THIS STUDY ANALYZES STReET, NEW YORK NY 10001. 19 p. 1978~
FAMILY DATA ON CRIMINAL AND ALCOHOLISM FOR MALE AND . NCJ.504A
FEMALE TWINS. A COMPriEHENSIVE MEDICAL·PSYCHIATRIC INTERVENTION PAO-
8ilppferntntal NotH: REPRINTED FROM ARCHIVES OF GENERAL GRAM DevELOPED IN COOPERATION WITH. A VIRGiNIA JUVENILE'
PSYCHIATRV, V 35 (AUGUST 1978), P 941·951. COU'RT IS ~SCRIBED. RESUL:TS FROM ~OllaWUP OF 11:!. JUVE·
NILES INT",IS PROGRAM ARE PRE.SENTED. .
173. INCIDENCE OF CHROMOSOME AB£RRAnOHS AMONG
MALES IH II DANIS" YOUTH PRISON. By J. NIELSEN 178. IS MAN INNATELV AG3RESSI'iE? (FROM NEUffAL BASEs
end F. HENRII(SEN. A(;fA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINA· OF VIOLENCE AND A(~RES$IONf 1175, B¥W,S FIl!1b8
VICA, KR 348. MUNKSGAARD, NOERAE SOEGADE 35, AND W H SWEET-SItE NCJ.57520~ By, A. ~AQU.
DK.1370 COPENHAGEN, DENMARK. ACTA PSYCH/A- WARREN H GREEN, IHI::, 10 SOUTH BRENlWooDIaOULE.
TRICA SCANDINAVICA, V 33, N 9 (SEPTEMBER 1972). P VARD. ST lOUIS 1\1(j 63105. ~s· p.1975.
87-102. . NCJ-H4IO
, . '.. . . ,~S7527
SAMPLE OF 151 MALES. III\'.A YOUTH PRISON IN DENMARK WAS THIS ARTICLE FROM THE SVMPosluM ON NEURAL BASES OF VJO·
UseD ro STUDY THE INCIDENCE Of CHROMOSOME. ABERRA- LENOE AND .t.GGRESSION INDt/CATES THAT AGGRESSIVEBEHAV·
TIONS AND THE POSSIBLE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE SIZE OF
THE Y cHROMOSOME, CRIMINALITY, AND MENTAL DISORDERS. ~R,~~I~,~~~~~~~~rr~ciN~? ENVIRQN.MENT, FlEGARDLESS .'
174. INCIDENCE OF LEARNING DISABILITIES IN JUVENILE DE· 110, ISTtlERI! A H~R.~l'rJijlYCRIMINAuTv'l .,. (GiBTESKRf.o
UNQUENTS ANP.. HONDEUNQUENT$-IMPUCATIONS MlNEUE EABANLAOEiN?) By U. fUELL(,IRA8E. .KRI.
t=oR ET10LOOV 10Mb TREATMENT~ By A. BERMAN. 6 . MINAI,.ISTIK VERLAG ~!~BH, AI<ADEMIESTRASS 6, POST"
p. 1975. NCJ.40741 > FACtI 10 26 40,69j)O HEIOELBURG 1, GERMlINY; KRI-
THe HYPOTHESIS THAT EARLY:UNDIAGNOSED LEARNING PIS- MINALISTlI(" V~2, N 7 (JULY 1918),; P ~~OO.~ (I~
• German) . " . , ' , NCJ;'~27'
ABILITIES ARE A SIGNIFICANT OAU$E OF DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR
WAS TESTED AT A RHODE ISLAND TRAINING SCHOOL ARGUING THAT ENVIRONMEN1' /'lAS AT LEAIlIT AS Ml)CI(lF NOT'
~taI HOtts: PAPER PRESENTED AT THE INTERNATIONAL MOfIE, INF,LUENCE ON CHILD OEVElOPMENT AS. H~REOITY. THIS
FEDI$ATION OF LEARNING DISABIUTIES, seCOND INTERNATION· G~R~·LANGU;A~E· ARTICLE, ~EVIEWS .SWDiES .DISPFlOYING
ALSOIENTIFIC CONFERENCE, BRUSSELS, BEl-GlUM, JANUARV 3-7. THE THeORY l'HATCFlIM4NAI. 'rRAITS A~e l"l\-1eRITAa~E," .
1976.
. A~ ERIC DOCUMENT REPRQDUCTION seRVICE, POBOX 1.1., .wviNILlMUNQiJlHCY .(IN:Gi~'s).'.·.,,~ • .,,.. .
1iMJ, AR~INGTOt-.lVA 2221~ Stock OrdM No. ED 112 620i NCJAS DARAM' ~. II; POLN#IVA. INDlAt. SOOI~OFCRIMI.,'
MICROFICHE PROGRAM. NC!LOGV 1)f\lIV!;RS!TY;~:OF' MAOR~lS,~AS~5; .

.'
15
I,
,"
.0' ., "
.. ,,'
, ' ;:
t KINDs ~ f5t1OaooY , "
{

,
INDiA. INOIAN:JOURNAL 'oF CRiMINOLOGY, V 7. N 1 APPROPRIATE REMEDIAL ~INING HAD'.~IGNIFICAmt.V L~
",(JANUARY 19'79), P 48-58. "NcJ056D38 RECIDIVIS~ THAN THOSE WHO DID NOT. ",.' • L
THE ROLE OF Milo MENTAL RETARDATION IN THE ETlCiOGV OF
DELiNcOENCYAMONG 60 FEMALE' JUVENILES HOUSED IN A COij·
SUpplemutal Notes: REPRINTED, FROM JOURNAL OF LEARNING
DISABILITIES. V 11. N 4 (APRIL 1978)," , ~f.!I
REqrJONALFACIUTY IN MADR~S, INDIA, IS,EXAMINED.
188. LEARNING DISABILiTIES AND JUVENILE oEUNOUENCV.
112. KINDS OF AGGRESSION AND 'THEIR PHYSIOLOGICAL By P. W. ZINKUS and M. t. GOTTLIEIl., J 8' UPPINCo'n:
BASIS. ByK. E. rooYEIt AC~DEMIC PRESS, INC, 111 EAST WASHINGTON SQUARE, PHI(:ADELPHIA PA 191 •
FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YO~'" Ill" 10003. COMMUNICA- GUNICAL PEDIATRIcs, V 17. N 10 (OCTOBER 19 . P
TIONS IN BEHAVIORAL S'iOl.:;,"!'~Y, V 2, ,N2,PART ,A n 5 - 7 8 0 . N C J . 541
(AUGUST 1968), P 65-87. NCJ._2 THIS STUDY EXAMINES THE INCIDENCE. CHARACTERISTICS. AND
THE PHYSIOLOGICAL BASES OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR ARE SIGNIFICANCE, OF LEARNING DISABILITIES. ,IN A SAMPLE. OF 44
,IDENTIFIED FROM A REVIEW OF TWO DECADES OF RESEARCH MALE DELINQUENTS. AGED 13-18, WHO HAP SEEN REFERRED TO
STUDIES AND IT IS ARGUED THAT AGGRESSION IS NOT A UNI· RESIDENTIAL HOMES BY AJUVENILE COURT.
TAAY PHENOMENON. '
8ponIorIn; Agency:, NATIONAL' SCIENCE FOUNDATION, 1800 G 1st. LEARNING DISABILmES IN JUveNILE DEUN0UENT8.
By A. BERMAN. 12 p. 1973. , NCJ.&8tI1 ,J
STREET; NW, WASHiNGTON DC 20550.
THEAELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NEUROPATHOLOGICALLY BASED
183. KLINEFELTER'S .SYNDROME AND DEUNOUENCY. By H. LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY IS EXAM-
HUNTER. STEVENS AND SONS, 11 NEW FElTER LANE, I~ED, WITH REFERENCE TO A RHODE ISLAND.STUDY OF ~.~~
LONDON; ENGLAND;' INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY- AND LlNQUENT MALES. ' : ,•
TREATMENT OF DELINQUENCY, 34 SURREY STREET,
,CROYDEN, SURREY CRO IRJ UK. BRmSH JOURNAL OF SUpplemental Notes: PRESENTED TO THE 7TH ANNUAL SPRINa
CRIMINOLOGY, V 8, N 2 (APRIL 1968), P 203-207. CONFI:RENCE OF THE MASSACHUSETTS ASSOCIATION FOR CHIL·
NcJ-57127 DREN WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES. BOSTON (MA), MARcH 9.
1973.
CASE HISTORIES OF 17 MALE RESIDENTS OF HOSPITALS FOR
THE ,MENTALLY ABNORMAL DIAGNOSED AS HAVING KLINE·
Availability: MASSACHUSETTS ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDREN WiTH
LEARNING DISABIUTlES, 11 RIVER STREET. WELLESLEY MA
FELTER'S SYNDROME WERE COMPARED WITH THOSE OF CON· 02181.
TROLS TO EXAMINE LINKS BElWEEN ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND
THE SYNDROME. . 180. LEARNING DISABILITY AS A PREQiSPOSING CAUSE OF
CRIMINAUTV. ." It UND£RWOOO:CANAoA DEPART·
114. LACK OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN DEFECTIVE DEU,.. MENT OF NATIONAL HEALTH AND WELFARE, HEALTH'
, 'QUENTS AND ANTIBODY OF HERPESVIRUS HOMINIS. PROGRAMS BRANCH. OTTOWA, OTTOWA 1<1A 194.
By'D: A. FUCCILLO. J. E. KURENT, S. tL MANNE, D. RO- CANADA KIA 134. CANADA'S MENTAL HEALTH. V 24;
SENTHAL, E. BEADLE, end J.. L SEVER. LANCET PUBLI· N 4 (DECEMBER 1(176). P 11·16. NCJ.AISI5I
CATIONS, INC, 4015 WEST 65TH STRECT, MINNEAPOLIS THIS PAPER EXAMINES S1:>ME OF THE DIsoRDERED INTERPER-
MN 55435. NEUROLOGY, V 27, N 3 (MARCH 1977), P
3()4.3(15. NCJ-571C5 SONAL RELATIONSHIPS. PI:CULIAR TO CHILDaEN WITH LEAflNiNG
DISABILITIES AS DESCRIBED IN PUBLISHED RESEARCH. '
TO INVESTIGATE A POSSIBLE ASSOCIATION BElWEEN HERPES-
VIRUS lidMINIS INFECTION AND AGGRESSION,RESEARCHERS
, .
111. LEARNING DIWIIUTV-DEANmoNS, AND PROCE-
.DETERMINED HERPESVIRUS ANTIBODY LEVELS IN 57 RESIDENTS DURes. ~ CAMF'8I;1,L 20 p. 1.978.' ~rt7I
OF THE PA1'UXENT, MD.. INSTITUTION FOR DEFECTIVE DELIN· A STUDY OF ADJUDICATED DEUNQUENT AND NONDELINQUENT
QUENTS. BOYS, 12 TO 15 YEARS OUO, WAS UNDERTAKEN TO DETERMINE
WHETHER THERE IS A LINK BETWEEN LEARNING DlsAalU11ES
185';' LEARNiNGDISABILlnES AND DEI:.INQUENT YOUTH AND DELINQUENCY.
(FROM YOUTH IN TROUBLE-A SYMPOSIUM. MAY 2-3.
18704 BY IJETTY LOUKRATOVILLE .... SEE NCJ-35902), Supplemental Notes: PRESE"1TED AT THE 1978 ANNUAL CONFER·
8y A. J; MAUER8. ACADEMIC THERAPY PUBLICATIONS. ENCE ON. LEARNING DISAI:iILITY, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. .'
1539 FOURTH STREET•.SAN RAFAEL CA 94901. 12 p. Sf,1Oftaoring A~ncy: NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR JUVENILE JUSTICE
1974. ~5D05 AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION. WASHINGTON DC 20531. .
AFTER EXAMINING THE CHARACTERISTICS OF TODAY'S JUVENILE Ava'lablilty: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
DELINQUENTS, THE AUTHOR REVIEWS CURRENT THOUGHTS ON
THE. RELATIONSHIP OF DELINQUENCY AND LEARNING DISABIL· 1G2. LEARNING HANDICAP-THE UNDERDIAGNOSED DI8AIJIL.
ITIES AND DISCUSSES TREATMENT OF LEARNING DISABLED DE· lTV. By J. W. POD8OY end W. A. IlIALI..ORY.· NATION-
~INOUJ:NTS. AL COUNCIL err JUVENILE ,AND FAMILY COURT JUDGES.
BOX 8978. UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, RENo NY. 89507.
10. LEARNING DlSAElILmES AND JUVENILE DEUNQUENCY. JUVENILE AND FAMILY COURT JOURN~L, V 29; N4 ,(NO.
,By K. V. UNGER. ' NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JUVENILE AND VEMBER1978). P 13-16. "~
'FAMILY COURT JUDGES, BOX 8978. UNIVERSITY OF A SAMPlE OF 183 MALE AND 67 FEMALE JUVeNILES DETAINED
, -NEVADA, RENO NV 895Q7. JOURNAl. OF .JUVENILE AND AT A DETENTION FACILITY BETWEEN AUGUST 1976 AND MAY
FAMILY COURTS. V 29. N1 (FEBRU:'RY,1978), P 25-30. 19n WERE STUDIED TO DETERMINE THE'INCiDENCE' OF LEAAN~
NCJ.45082 ING DISABiliTIES AMONG JUVENILE OELINQUENT$; ,
, JUV~N'LE DELlN,QUENT BEHAV!OR 1$ DISCUSSED AS A SYMPTOM
't:
, .
OF THE OAGANIC BRAIN DISORDER' kNOWN' AS LEARNING PIS- 1&3. LENGTH OF THe Y CHROMOSOME IN CRIMINAL IIIALU.
~IUTIES. ' ' . By J. NIELSEN and U. FRIEDRICH. MUNKSGMAD.

:'
,.7, ,wANING DlSABII.ITIES AND JUVENILE DEUNOUENCY.
. By Go H; UCHARA _ J.N.' %ABA. PROFESSIONAL
NOERRE SOEGADE35, DK-1370COPENHAGENK.0EN-
MARK. CLINICAL GENETIcs, V3. N.4 (MARCH 1972),'P
281·285. " ~
PRESS INC; 101 EAST ONTARIO' STREET. CHICAGO ,IL MEASUREMENTS OF Y AND F CHROMOSOMES IN3SAMPLES,0f
" ' 806t:1.
'5 5).197$. ' NCJ.50338 CRIMINAL MALES (407 MEN) AND IN 1D4NEWBORN BOYS~cot,I;.
"'. THIs 'STUDY' OF LEARNING DISAl3tED JUVENILE OFFENDERS STITUTING A 10 PERCENT. RANDOM SAMPLE OF 1,400) WE,*
F~ND TtlAi'THOSE WHO RECEIVI;DS~.ECIALEDVCATION OR COMPARED IN THIS DANISH STUDY.' '
".

16
.". ~.~
"
~.,,;(,.H , ." _ ,,.., • ;'., . , ,,-'"
MMPI·

114. LEHGl.:H OF THE Y-CHROMOSOMES IN MEN EXAMINED 200. MEDICAL MODEL IN CRIMINOLOGY (FOOM HUMAN AG-
.•Y FO\~:PSYCHIATRISTS. By H. O. AKES$ON and GRESSION . AND' DANOEW'JUSNEsS. 10n.· BY D
J. W'AHLSTROM.·. SPRINGER·VERLAG,175 FIFTH LABERGE-ALTMEJb-SEE'NcJ.s74N). By R. R.
AVENUE, NEW VORl< NY 10010. HUMAN GENEtIcs. V MONROE. INSTITUT PHIUPPE PINEL DE MONTREAL, 12,
39, N 1 (1$77), P 1-5. NCJ.S1185 333 BOULEVARD. MONTREAL., QUEBEC 478, CANADA. 22
THIS ARTICLE REPORTS AN INVESTIGATION ON THE RELATIVE p. '. 1978. CanIid8. NCJ.51487
~TI:I OF Y-CHFlOMOSOMES IN t.tALE PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS A SAMPLE OF 93 RECIDIVIST AGGRESSORS INCARCERATED AT
AND HEALTHY CONTROL SUBJECTS, INDICATING NO POSITIVE MARYLAND'S .PATUXENT INSTITUTION WERE RANDOMLY SELECT-
ASSOCIATION BETWEE.N ED TO EVALUATE 11 MEDICAL MODEL OF PSYCHOPATHY AND EPI:
· ,., CHROMOSOME LENGTH AND . CRIMINAL· $ODIC DYSCONTROL
lTV"
~ Notn: ALSO FOUND IN THE PSYCHOPATH-A COM-
1M. UNK BETWEEN LEARNING DISABILmES AND JUVENILE PREHENSIVE STUDY OF SOCIOPATHIC DISORDERS AND BEHA·
QEUNaUEHCY-CURRENT THEORY AND KNOWLEDGE. VIORS, BY W H REID.
By C. A. MURRAY•. AMERICAN INSmUTES FOR RE·
SEARCH. 196 p. 1916. NCJo3GfI35 201. MEl)IClNE AND CRIME. By T. C. N. GIBBENS. HEAD-
THIS REPORT WAS DESIGNED 'TO ASSIST THE OFFICE OF JUVE·
LEY BROS LTO, ASHFORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND.
BRmSH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, SPECIAL PUBLICA·
NltE JUSTICE AND OEUNOUEN<.W PREVENTION IN DETERMINING TION N.9 (1975), P 296-301. NCJo6741!1
WHAT. IF ANYTHING, SHOULD I~E DONE ABOUT LEARNING DIS.
THIS ARTICLE DISCUSSES THE TREATM!:NT OF PERSONALITY
AElIUTIES AS A MEANS OF REtlUClNG OR PREVENTING DEUN·
DISORDERS INVOLVING CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, AND ADVOCATES
QUENCY: INTERMEDIATE PENALTIES FOR OFFENDERS THAT WILL PROVIDE
., ' . . .' ' ~ AgenCy: NATlOOAL INSTITUTE FOR JUVENILE JUSTICE SUPERVISION AND NORMAL SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT.
AND DEUNOUENCY PREVENTION, WASHiNGTON DC 20531.
A~ GPO Stock Order No. 027.QOO-004?9-2i NCJRS MI· 202. MENTAL ILLNESS AND PATTERNS OF BEHAVIOR 1M 10
-. ,_C1!~E-fflCl9~, XYY MALES. By R. F. DALV. WILliAMS AND WILKINS
COMPANY, 428 EAST PRESTON STREET, BALTIMORE MD
1M. UN~ BE1WEEH LEARNING DISABlunES AND JUVENILE
21202. JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE.
DELINQUENCY-CURRENT THEORY AND KNOWLEDGE- V 149, N 4 (OCTOBER 1961i). P318-327. NCJ.57142
!\ EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. By C. A. MURRAY. AMERICAN AMONG MEN 6 FEET OR TALLER CONFINED TO MAXIMUM SECU·
INSTITUTES FOR RE~iEARCH. 27 p. 1976. RITY HOSPITALS, 10 XVY MALES WERE IDENTIFIED BY CHROMO-
NCJ-3f1836 SOME ANALYSIS OF CULTURED LYMPHQCYTJ:S. SUMMARIES ARE
sYNoPsiS OF A REPORT DESIGNED TO ASSIST THE JUVENILE PROVIDED OF THEIR CASE HISTORIES OBTAINED FROM HOSPI.
JUSTIcE AND DEUNOUENCY PREVENTION IN DECIDING WHAT. IF TAL RECORDS. .
ANYTHING, SHOULD BE DONE ABOUT LEARNING DISABILITIES AS
A MEANS OF REDUCING OR PREVENTING JUVENILE OELINQUEN· 203. MEh'1ALLY DISORDERED VIOLENT OFFENDERS. By H.
CY; . HAEFNER and W.. BOEKER.SPRINGER.VERLAG, 175
FIFTH AVENUE,. NEW YORK NY 10010. SOCIAL PSYCHIA·
IponIorIng Agency: NATIONAL IN~~TITUTE FOR JUVENILE JUSTICE TRY. V 8, N 4 (NOVEMBER 1973), P ~229.

AYtIiIIIbIiltY: GPO Stock


CROFICHEPROGRAM.
0._
AND. DEUNQVENCY PREVEIIfTION, WASHINGTON DC 20531.
Nc,. 027.()()().()O555-1: NCJRS MI·
NCJ.57140
A DESCRIPTIYE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY IS CONDUCTED TO !:!!:.
TERMINE THE AMOUNT OF VIOLENT CRIME COMMITTED BV MEN·
TALLY ILL OFFENDERS AS OPPOSED TO THE AMOUNT OF CRIME
,. 117. L()NGER Y CHROMOSC,ME IN CRIMINALS. By D. COMMITTED BY OFFENDERS WHO ARE NOT MENTALLY ILL ..
SOUDEK and P. LARAY,," MUNKSGAARD, NOERRE SOE·
GADE 35, DK·1370 COPENHAGEN K, DENMARK. CLINI· 204. MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN CHILDREN-TEAMI-
C« GENErIcs, V 6, N 3 (1974), P 225-229. NOLOGY AND IDENTIFICATION-PH. US DEPARTMENT
NCJ.57187 OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE PUBUC HEALTH
THiS ARTICLE REPORTS AN DINGS OF A COMPARATIVE SURVEY SERVICE, 5600 FISHERS LANE, ROCKVILLE MD 20652.
OF'84 NONPSYCHOTIC MAlE CRIMINALS AND 36 CONTROL SUB· 24 p. 1966. . NCJ.54558
JECTS INDICATING SIGNIFICANTLY LONGER V-CHROMOSOMES IN THIS FIRST REPORT IN A SERIES OF DYSFUNCTIONS ALTERING
THE CRIMINALS THAN IN THE CONTROLS. THE BEHAVIOR AND INTELLECTUAL PERFORMANCE OF CHILDREN
DISCUSSES MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, ITS IDENTIFYING FAC-
ill. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEUNOUENCY. By P. D. SCOTT. TORS, AND IrS TERMINOLOGY.
HEADLEY BROS LTD, AS~fFORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENG· Supplementat MOtn: PHASE ONE OF fit. THREE·PHASE PROJECT-
'. LAND. fJRmSH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, SPECIAL
" PUBUCATION N 9 (1975), P 287·295. NCJ-57407
NINDB MONOGRAPH N 3.
Sponsoring AQI8f\CIU: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
f\cSEARCH ON THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DELINQUENCY COVER· AND WELFARE. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE, 5600 FISHERS LANE,
ING,PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEAL'IJ'H AS WELL AS P~ENATAL AND ROCKVILLE MD, 208S2; NATiONAL EASTER SEAL SOCIETY FOR
GENETIC FACTORS IN. BEHAVIOR AC.KNOWLEDGEfI THAT THE EVI· CRIPPLED CHILOAEN 1o.NO ADULTS, 2023 W OGDEN AVENUE. CHI·
CAGO IL 60012. .. . ,'
~ OFASSOC!~l1ON IS .SCANlY.
205. "alPI (MINNESOTA MuLTIPHASIC PERSONUrrf INVEtf.o
11)1.MEDICAL HI$TORIES OF DEUNQUENT AND NONDELlN- TORY) PROFILEiJ OF MALES .WITH ABNORMAL SEX
. , QUEHT CHILDfIEN.-AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY. By CHROMOSOME COMPi.ErliENTS. By M.· ROSEN. M.,
D. o. LEWIS anti S. S. SHANOK; AMERICAN PSYCHIAT· BERGMAN; and IlL A. ttLFJ!R. NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR .
RIC ASSOCIATION, 1700 1ErrH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON MENTALLY HANDICAPPED CHILDREN, .PEMBflIPGEHAI.L.'
DC 20009. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 17PEMBRIDGE SQUARE, .LONDON W2 4EP, EN$J"AND.
:.,' 134. N 9 (SEPTEMBER 1971', P 1020-1025. NCJ.57084 JOURNAL OF MENTAL DEFICIENCY RESEAR.CH. V 15, N
DIFFERENCES IN THE MEDICAL BACKGROUNDS OF 109 DELlN· 3.(SEp,TEMBER ,971). ~ 18H7~." .' NCJ-~7
QUENT AND 109 NONDELINQUENT CHILDREN IN NEW HAVEN,· IN ORDER TO '!:VALUATE THE PERiSPNALIT'I OF 'I.YY, AND' .XXY
CONN•• ARE EXPLORED. MALES nilS STUDY AP'I"LlESTHE.MINNESOTA MULlIPHASIC PER-
siio~ Age~ FORO FOUNDATION, 320 EAST 4aRO STREET, SONAlliY INVENTORV, (MMf'I) TO A .SAMRLE OF 9 t<LlNEFELTER
NEW.YORKNV.10017. (4'7 XXV) At</D 7 XYV MALES. • .

17
NEED· The EtiolOgy

208. NEED FOR A NEW APPROACH TO THE UI:lING 70 CASE STUDIES OF PERSONS TREATED FoR NEURO-
DEUNQUENToCRIMINAL PROBLEM . (fROM LOGICAL DISEASE. A DOCTOR PRESENTS AN ARGUMENT LINKING
ECCLOGIc-aIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT VIOLENT BEHAVIOR TO THE DYSCONTROL SYNDROME, AN OR·
OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 107', BY LEONARD J GANIC DISEASE WHICH MANIFESTS ITSELF IN EXPLOSIVE. UN..
rfIPPCHEN-SEE NC.J.150444). By L J. HIPPCHEN. VAN CONTROLLABLE RAGE.
NOSTRAND REINHOLD. 450 WEST 33RD STREI:T. NEW
'fORK NY 10001. 17 p. 1978. ~
213. NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS wmt ANTISOCI
TRADITIONAL APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF CAUSATIVE FAC- BEHAVIOR. By R. R. MONROE, G. U. DAUS, J. RUBI , J.
TORS OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY AND CRIME HAVE BEEN TOO R. UON, B. HULFlSH, M. MCDONALD, end D. K.
LIMITED. BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES MAY MAKE IMPORTANT INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR BIOLOGICAL AND
CONTRiBUTIONS TO THE FIELD OF CRIMINOLOGY. . MEDICO-FORENSIC CRIMINOLOGY. POBOX 22216. SAO
PAULO, BRAZIL 22 p. 1975. NCJ4M71
207: NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AGGRESSION. W. DESCRIPTION OF A STUDY OF THE ETIOLOGY AND PREVALENCE
S. FIELDS and W. H. SWEET, EdL WARREN H GREEN, OF THE NEUROPSYCHIATRIC SYNDROME 'EPISODIC BEHAVIORAL .,
INC, 10 SOUTH ~ENTWOOD BOULEVARD, ST LOUIS MO DISORDERS' AMONG A CRIMINAL PoPULATION.
63105. 551 p. 1975. NCJ.571S2O
Supplemental Notes: PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL
THIS COMPILATION REPORTS THE MEDICAL FINDINGS AND SYMPOSIUM ON CRIMINOLOGY-BIOLOGICAL MODEL. PART 1.
PHILOSOPHICAL ESSAYS PRESENTED AT THE 1972 HOUSTON
NEUROLOGICAL SYMPOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE 214. NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CORRELATES Of CRIMINAL
AND AGGRESSION. PSYCHOPATI~, PART 2-DISCRIMINATION AND PREDIC-
Availability: WARREN H GREEN, INC. 10 SOUTH BRENTWOOD TION OF DANGEROUS AND RECIDIVISTIC OFFENDERS
BOULEVARD, ST LOUIS MO 83105. (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION AND DANGER0U8NE8S-
• SEE NCJ.57484). By L T. YEUDALl... INSTITUT PHI·
205. NEUROALLERGY AS A CONTRIBUTING FACTOR TO LIPPE PINEL DE MONTREAL. 12, 333 BOULEVARD, M0N-
SOCIAL MISFITS DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT (FROM TREAL, QUEBEC 478, CANADA. 24 p. 1978. CInada.
ECOLOOIC·BIOCHI!:MICAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT NCJ.1S1'....
OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1078, 8Y LEONARD J A DISCUSSION IS PROVIDED OF THE UTILITY OF SELECTED NEUR.
HIPPCHEN-SEE Nc.J·1lO444). By R. C; WUNDERUCH. OPSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS AND ASSESSMENTS IN PREDICTING
VAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET, OFFENDER RECIDIVISM AND DANGEROUSNESS AND IN IDENTIFY·
NEW YORK NY 10001. 25!l. 1978. Nc.J.50454
ING SUBGROUPS WITHIN FORENSIC POPULATIONS.
THIS PAPER DESCRIBES THE ROLE OF NEURO...LLERGY AS A
CONTRIBUTING FACTOR TO LEARNING AND PERCEPTUAL P~OB· 215. NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CORRELATES OF CRIMINAL
LEMS, SCHOOL FAILURE. fiND DELINQUENCY. DIAGNOSIS AND PSYCHOPAtHy, PART 1-DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
TREATMENT APPROACHES ARE OUTLINED. .. . . (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION AND DANGEROUSNESS,
1070, BY D LABERGE·ALTMEJD-SEE NCJ.57414). By L
m. NEUROENDOCRINE COnRELAT£S OF SEXUAL AND AG- T. YEUDALL INSTITUT PHILIPPE PINEL DE MONTREAL.
GRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN HUMANS. By R. M. ROSE. 12, 333 BOULEVARD, MONTREAL. QUEBEC 478. CANADA.
RAVEN PRESS, INC, 1140 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, 61 p. 1978. Canada. NCJ.57.-.a
NEW YORK NY 10036. PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, THE ROLE OF BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN HABITU";I. CRIMINAL PSY·
(1978), P 541-552. Nc.J·tI4010 CHOPATHY IS EXAMINED IN TERMS OF NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL
THIS REVIEW OF RESEARCH FROM 1988-1978 DISCUSSES NEUR· ASSESSMENT TECHNIQUES WHICH MANY RESEARCHERS HAVE
OENDOCRINE CORRELATES OF BEHAVIOR INCLUDING GONADAL SUGGESTED FOR USE IN STUDIES OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR.
HORMONES AND MALE AND FEMALE SEXUAL BEHAVIOR AND
TESTOSTERONE AND AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN MALES. 218. NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL DISCRIMINATION BETWEEN
VIOLENT AND NONVIOLENT MEN. By F. SPELLACY.
2tO. NEUROLEPTICS-VIOLENCE AS A MANIFESTATION OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY PUBLISHING COMPANY, 4
AKATHISIA. By W. A. KECKICH. AMERICAN MEDICAL CONANT SQUARE, BRANDON VT 05733. JOURNAL OF
ASSOCIATION, 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET. CHIC'.GO CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 34, N 1 (JANUARY 1978). P
IL 60810. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL llSSa.. 49·62. NCJ.5m11
CIATlON, V 240, N 20 (NOVEMBER 10, 1978). P 2185. EIGHTY MALE VOLUNTEERS DRAWN FROM A PENITENTIARY
NCJ.57213 SAMPLE WERE USED TO EXAMINE THE ABIL:TY OF NEUROPSY·
A CliNICAL NOTE IS PROVIDED ON A CASE OF A MALE, CHOLOGICAL TESTS AND THE MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC pER·
29-YEAR·OLD SOCIOPATH WHOSE TREATMENT WITH TWO ANTI· SONALITY INVENTORY TO DIFFERENTIATE BETWEEN VIOLENT
DEPRESSANT DRUGS··IMIPRAMINE AND HALOPERIDOL-LED TO AND NONVIOLENT SUBJECTS.
AKATHISIA AND PRECIPITATED A VIOLENT ACT. Sponaorlng Apncy: CANADA MINISTRY OF NATIONAL HEALTH
AND WELFARE, OTTAWA, CANADA.
211. NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST AGGRESSORS
(FROM PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION;
1t77, BY RUCSELL R MONROE ET AL). By R. R. :m. NEUROPSYCHOLoGICAL FUNCTION OF NORMAL BOYS,
MONROE, B. HULFISH, G. BALIS, J, LION, J. RUBIN, M. MC- DELINQUENT BOYS, "ND BOYS WITH LEAR~ING PROI-
DONALD, and J. D. BARCIK. RAVEN PRESS, INC, 1140 LEMS. By I. HURWITZ, R. M. A. BIBAC!, P. H. WOLF, lind
AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK NY 10038. 13 p. B. M. ROWBOTHAM. PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS.
BOX 1441. MISSOULA MT 59801. PERCEPTUAL liND
1977. ~571"
MOTOR SKILLS, V 35, (197?), P 307-394. NCJ-5I5N
HISTORICAL DATA ON THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEMS OF 94
TWO STUDIES COMPARING THE SENSORIMOTOR FUNCTIONS
RESIDENTS OF PATUXENT INSTITUTION, MD., FOR DEFECTIVE DE·
AND COGNITIVE ~TYLES OF NORMAL BOYS, JUVENILE DELlN·
LlNQUENTS WERE ANALYZED USING A NEUROLOGIC SCALE TO
QUENTS. ANt:; BOYS WITH LEARNING PROBLEMS ARE PRESENT·
IDENTIFY FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH AGGRESSIVE RECIDIVISM.
ED.
212. NEUROLOGICAL FACTORS IN VIOLENT BEHAVIOR (THE 8pcmsorlng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
DVSCONTROL SYNDROME) (FROM VIOLENCE AND Re- ANO WELFARE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE, 6800 FISHERS LANE,
SPONSIBILITY, 1078, BY ROBERT L SADOfF-SEE ROCKVILLE MD 20852.
NCJ·S3974). By F. A. EWOTT. . SPECTRUM PUBLICA·
TIONS, INO, 76·31 192ND STREET, FLUSHING lilY 11368. 211. ttEW CLUES TO THE CAUSES OF VIOLENcE. 8y O. BY·
28 p. 1978. NCJ.53.77 IJNSKY. TIME, INC, TIME AND LIFE BUILDING, ROCKE-

18
of Criminality
---------------------------------------------1
PRECURSOR I

, FELLER CENTER, NEW YORK Ny 1002(1. FORTUNE, V 225. PERSONAUTV AND UFE HISTORY OF FEilALE OFFEND-
'87, N 1 (JANUARY 1973), P 134-148. NCJ.i07I11 . ERS AND THEIR SIOS-A TAXONOMIC ANb G!NETIC
ANALYSIS. By B. CHESTER. 268 p. 1976.
EXPER'IMENTAL RESEARCH ON AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR, INCLUD-
ING A ''DESCRIPTION OF THE INNER STRUC7URES OF THE BRAIN
.... , ~

THAT INITIATE AND CONTROL VIOLENCE. A CLINICAL ANDPSYCHOMETfIIC APPROACH IS TAKEN TO Cl.ARI·
FYING THE CONCEPT OF CRIMINALITY IN FEMALE OFFE'IOERS AS
210. NORWEGIAN TWIN STUDY OF CRIMINALITY. By O. S. OPPOSED TO CRIMINALITY IN MALES.
DALGARD lind E. KRINGLEN. INSTITUTE FOR THE SUpplemental HolM: SPECIAL PRIC.eS FOR ACADEMIC INSTITUTES
STUDY AND TREATMENT OF. DELINQUENCY, 11 NEW UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA-DOCTORAL THESIS.
FETTER LANE, LONDON EC4 P4EE, ENGLAND. BRmSH Availability: UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS, 300 NORTH :lEEB ROAD.
JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, V 18, N 3 (JULY 1976). P ANN ARBOR MI46106.' Stock Ord~r No. 77·7026. (Microfiche)
213·232. NCJ.31243
THE AiM OF THIS STUDY WAS TO ARRIVE AT REPRESENTATIVE 22t.~SPECnVES ON THE MEDICAL RESEARCH OF VJO.
CONcORDANCE FIGURES FOR IDENTICAL AND FRATERNAL LE~E. By L. S. COLEMAN. AMERICAN ORTHOPSY.
TWINS WITH REGARD TO CRIMINALITY TO MEASURETH~ RELA· CHIATRIC ASSOCIATION. 1775 BROADWAY. NEW YORK NY
10019. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ORTHOPSYCHIATRY,
TIVE EFFECT OF HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT ON ANTI.socIAL
V «, N 5 (OCTOBER 1974), P 675-667. NCJ.58311
BEHAVIOR.
MUCH OF THE BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE CONDUCT·
ED IN THE 11170'S IS BASED ON HIGHLY aUESTIONABI.EASSUMP.
220; NOSOLOGY OF VIOLENCE (FROM NEURAL, BASES OF
VIOLENCE AND AGGRESSION, 1076, BY W F FlEi.D9 AND TIONS. THIS PAPER REVIEWS RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE AND EX·
• W A SWEET-SEE NCJ.67520). By T. DETRE, D. J. AMINES POLiTICAL IMPliCATIONS OF VIOLt:NcE PREDICTION•
KUPFER, and S. TAUB. WARREN H GREEN,INC, 10 t3uppIememaI Notee: PRESENTED AT THE 1974 ANNUAL MEETING
SOUTH BRENTWOOD BOULEVARD, ST LOUIS MO 63105. OF THE AMERICAN ORTHOPSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, SAN
24 p. 1975. NCJ.57524 FRANCISCO, CAUFORNIA. •
THIS ARTICLE FROM A SYMPOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIQ.
LENCe DESCRIBES TRAITS THAT DIFFERENTIATE VIOLENT prR· 227. PHYSIOLOGY OF VIOLENCE-THE ROLE OF CEREBRAL
HYGlERSENSInVE REACTION IN AGGRESSION. ~ W.
SONS FROM NONVIOLENT PERSONS WITH OTHER BEHAV;..)R PHILPO·iT. 1976. NCJ.4oose
PRtlBLEMS, A DESCp.lrr:ON BASED ON RECORDS OF 900 PSYCHI·
TAPED PRESENTATION CONTENDS THAT INDIVIDUALS CAN BE i'lL·
ATRIC PATIENTS,
LEr'GICALLY MALADAPTIVE TO CERTAIN FOODS AND CHEMICALS
IN SUCH A WAY THAT PREDISPOSES TttEM TO VIOLENT ACTS.
221. ORGANIC DIMENSION OF CRIME. By J. O. SMALL.
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 535 NORTH DEAR· Supplemental Not..: 65 MlhUTES. 1976.
BORN STREET, CHICAGO IL 60610.ARCHIVES OF GEN· Availability: HUXLEY INSTITUTE FOR BIQ.SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1114
: ERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 15, N 1 (JULY
1986), P 112-89. FIRST AVENUE, NEW YO~K NY 10021 (Audio Caaaetto)
HCJ-55823
THIS STUDY EXAMINES RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN CLINICAL AT· 228. PLASMA CATECHOLAMINES, STRESs AND AocmESSlON
TRIBUTES-CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM (CNS) DISORDERS AND IN MAXIMUM SECURITY PATIENTS. By D. D. WOOD-
MAN, .J. W. HINTON, and M. T. O'NEILL
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) ABNORMALITIES-IN 100 NORTH·HOLLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY, JAN VAN GA·
FELONS AND ASPECTS OF CRIMINAL AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR. LENSTR 335, AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS. BIOLOGICAL
PSYCNOLOGY, V 6, N 2 (1976); P 147·154.
222. ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH TO THE THEORY AND , NCJ.57100
.TREATMENT OF DRUG AND ALCOHOl. ABUSE (CRIME, PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO STRESS AMONG 58 MALE IN·
, "MALNUTRmON AND THE ORTHOMOLECULAR AP· MATES OF A MAXIMUM·SECURITY PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL ARE
PROACH CONFERENCE). By G. PRASTKA. 1976.
EXAMINED.
NC.J.4OO35
AUDIO.QASSETTE PRESENTATION COVERS SCOPE OF PRESENT 220. PLASMA T£STOSTERONE LEVELS IN THE RAPIST. By
PHILOSOPHY ON ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE AND THE RADICAL R. T. RADA and R. lI:~llNER. ELSEVIER
ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH TO THESE PROBLEMS. NORTH·HOLLAND, INC 52 VANDERBILT AVENUE, NEW
SUpplemental Not..: 45 MINUTES, 1976. YORK NY 10017. PSYCNOSOMATI(J MEDICINE, V 38, N
4 (JULY·AUGUST 19;0), P 257·266. NCJ.5G730
Avallablllty: HUXLEY INSTITUTE FOR BIC-SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1114 A STUDY OF TESTOS'i'ER,oNE (MALE SEX HORMONE) LEVELS IN
FIRST AVENUE, NEW YORK NY 10021 (Audio Cassette)
THE PLASMA OF 52 OFFENDEfiS CONVICTED OF RAPE AND 12
CONTROLS (OFFENDERS CONVICTED OF CHILD MOLESTATION
223. OR1HOMOLECUI.AR PSYCHIATRY AND CRIME (CRIME, WITHOUT VIOLENCE) IS DOCUMENTED.
MAUIUTRmO'~ AND THE ORTHOMOLECULAR AP-
PROACH CONFERENCE). By A. HOFFER. 1976.
NCJ-.40034
.'
230. POLYAMINE LEVELS IN JAIl,. INMATES. By C. GROES-
BECK clid B. D'ASARO. MORRIS COUNTY OFFICE OF
AUDIO CASSETTE PP.ESENTATION CONTENDS THAT CRIMINAL BE· THE SHERIFF, COUNTY COURTHOUSE, MORRISTOWN NJ
HAVIOR CAN, IN MANY INSTANCES, BE TRACED TO DIET AND NU· 07960. 1 p.' 1974. NCJ.,4341
TRITION. RESULTS OF' A STUDY TO DETERMINE THE RELATIONSHIP BE·
SUpplementa' Note.: 78 MINUTES, 1976. TWEEN THE QUANTITY OF POLYAMIN/;S IN THE I'lLooD AND BE. 1

Avallablllty: HUX1.EY INSTITUTE FOR BIQ.SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1114 HAVIOR. '


FIRST.AVENUE, NEW YORK NY 10021 (Audio Ces8fltte) SponlOl1ng Au.noy: NEW JERSEY STATE LAW ENFORCEMENt
PLANNING AGENCY, 3595 QUAKER BRIDGE ROAD, TRENTCN NJ
06625. .
224. ORTHOMOLECULAR TREATMENT OF CRIMINAL OFFEND-
ERS. BV A. O. SCHAUsa 40 p. 1976.
NCJ·Wl1. 231. PRECURSOR oF DEUNQUENCY ....THE. HypERKINETIC
DISORDER OF CHILDtlOOI). 8y A. BAf4CAli!~'''' Y.
THIS MONOGRAPH EXAMINES THE ORTHOMO~CULAR AP· 'RABKIN. NE'lN YORK'STATE DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL
PROACH TO OFFENDER TREATMENT, WITH EMPHASIS ON AS. HYGIENE HUDSON !=lIVER' PSYCHIATRIC CENTER,ROOGH·
SESSI~G AND TREATING THE ENVIRONMENTAL AND DIETARY l<eEPsiE' NY 12601,· .PSYCHIAtRIC aUARTtrRLY, . V 48;
FACTORS tHOUGHT TO UNDERLIE CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, N 3 (1974), P 387·399, . NCJ.HtJ!$

19 .
PREDICTION
,
EVIDENCE (INClUDiNG A OETAII.ED CASE HISTORy) UNKING THE 238. PREVALENCE OF THE XvV SYNDROME IN. ~ 1NSmu-
HYPERKINETIC SYNDAOME OF CHILDHOoo WITH DEUNOUENCY 110N fOR PSYCHOl..OGICALLY -AIJNORMAL CRIMINALS.
IN AQOLEscENcE IS EXAMINED. . . By J.NIEI.8EN.. G. STURUP,T. TSUBOI,anct D. RoMANO.
MUNKSGMRD, NOERRE SOEGADE 35,DJ<-1.370COPEN.
.232. PREDICTION OF ea· (ELE~LOGAAIQ AB- HAGEN K, DENMARK. ACTA PSYCHIATRIC Sf'-ANDIN.
VIG4, V 45, N 1 (1969), P 383-401. 2
NORMAunES IN ADOLUCENTDEUNQUENTS. By S. D.
LOOMIS, P. J. BOHHERT, and s. HUNeKE.. AMERICAN A STUDY OF CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMAUTIES AMONG IN·
MEDICAL ASSOCIAnON. 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET. MATES,OF A DANISH INsTITUTION FOR CRIMINAL PSYCH ATHS
CHICAGO IL 80810. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIA· IS ~EPORTED. .
. TRY. V 17, N 4 (1961). P 494-497. HCJ.58772
A SAMPLE OF 100 RESIDENTS·OF A HOME FOR DEUNQUENT AND 239. PRISON SURVEY FOR THE XlV KARYOTYPE iN TAU" 'IN- , i
DEPENDENT GIRLS WAS USED TO INvESnGATE THE CORRELA· IlATES.By W. H.F1MLEY, C. E.lICbANAL; S. C. F1NU\Y, I

nON BETWeEN ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM (EEG) ,ABNORMALI· and C. J. ROSECRANS, PLENUM PUBLISHING CORPORA·
nES AND JUVENILE DEUNOUENCV IN FEMALES. TION 227 WEST 17TH STREET, NEW YORK NY 1oot1.
BEHAVIOR GENETIcs. V 3, N 1 (MARCH 1973). P 97·100.
IUpplemental Notes: PRESENTED TO THE 1221110 ANNUAL MEET· NCJ.57141
ING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION. ATLANnC
CITY (NJ). MAY 9-13. 1966. TALL PRISONERS IN TWO ~BAMA PRISONS WERE CVTOGE.
NEnCALLY EXAMINED TO DETERMiNE THE INCIDENCE OF XYY
233. PREDICTJOH OF POUCE iNCiDENTS AND ACCIDENTS BY CHROMQS()ME INDIVIDU~ts IN THE SAMPLE AND IDENTIFY P0S-
METEOROLOGICAL, VARIABLES. By D. P. WILL JR and SIBLE CONSISTENCIES TYPE OF OFFENSES BY XXV PRISONERS.
S. B. SELL8. 'TEXAS. CHRISTIAN UIIIIVERSITY INSTITUTE SponaorIng ~ US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,
OF BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH. TCU CAMPUS. FORT WORTH AND WELFARE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE, 6eOO FISHERS LANE,
TX 76129. 88 p. 1969. NCJ.18426 ROCKVILLE MD 20652.
WEATHER VARIABLES WERE STUDIED AS PREDICTORS OF
POLICE INCIDENTS IN THE CITY OF FORT WORTH (TX) FOR A SIX 240. PROBLEMS OF CRIMINAL PSYCHOLOGY RELATED TO
MONTH PERIOD IN 1964. HYPOGLYCEMIC STATES. BV J. WILDER. JOURNAL
~ Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY OFFICE OF
OF CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, V 1. N 3 (JANUARY
1940), P 219-233. NCJ.5It71
NAVAL RESEARCH, WASHINGTON DC 20032.
A't8IIebIIIty: NTIS Acceuion No. AD 685615j NCJRS MICRO- REPORTED INCIDENTS OF CRIMINAUTV FOUND '1'0 BE ASSOCIAT·
FICHE PROGRAM. ED WITH HYPOGLYCEMIA ARE DISCUSSED. AND PSYCHOLOGICAL
AND BEHAVIORAL SYMPTOMS OF HYPOGLYCEMIA ARE DE·
234. PRELIMINARV STUDY OF CRIMINAUTY AMONG TWINS SCRIBED.
(fROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF ~RIMINnL BEHAVIOR, 1t77, I .'
BY SAAHOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 CHRIBnANSEN- 241. PROJECT CAMIO (CORREcnONAt ADMINISTRATION
61!E NCJ-4785). By K. O. CHRIBnANSEN. GARDNER AND THE MENTALLY INCOMPETENT OFFENDER). Y'Z-
PRESS, INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST. NEW YORK NY THEORIES ON CRIMINALITY AND MENTAL RIETARDA-
10003. 20 p. 1977. . NCJ.4728t TION. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH AND
. CONCORDANCE IN RELATION TO SOCIAL BACKGROUND FAC- MENTAL RETARDATION, BOX 128SB. CAPITOL STATION•
AUSTIN TX'76711. 153 p. 1973. NCJ..1.2528
ToRs IS ANALYZED IN UNSELECTED TWIN PAIRS FROM THE
DANISH TWIN REGISTER. . HISTORICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MENTAL RE·
TARDATION, AND THEORETICAL TRENDS OF THE RELATIONSHIP
236. PREVALENCE ANID A 2 1/2 YEARS INCIDENCE OF CHRO- BETWEEN MENTAL RETARDATION AND DEVIANT BEHAVIOR.
MOSOME ABNORMALITIES AMONG ALL MALES IN A FO- SponaorIng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION.
RENSIC PSYCHIATRIC CUNIC. Iy J. NIELSEN., HEAD· AND WELFARE, 330 INDEPENDENCE AVENUE, SW, WASHINGTON
LEY BROS LTD, ASHFORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND. DC 20201.
eRlnSH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, V 119, N 552 (NO·
VEMIBER 1971), P 503·512. NCJ·58847 242. PROSPEcnVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS OF CRIMINALiTY
THE FREQUENCY AND NATURE OF CHROMOSOME ABERRATIONS iNTRODUCTION (FROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL
AMONG 211 MALES REFERRED BY THE COURTS TO A PSYCHIAT· BEHAVIOR 1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0
RIC CLINIC IN DENMARK FOFl TREATMENT OR OBSERVATION ARE <:HRIBnANSEN-SEE NCJ.4728S). BV s. A. MEDNICK.
ANALYZED. GARDNER PRESS, INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW
YORK NY 10003, 2 p. 1977. NCJ-412t3
_ PREVi~LENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE. XVY SYNDROME A PROSPECTIVE ¢,oNGITUDINAL STUDY OF 207 CHILDREN WITH
AND KUNEFELTER'B 8YNDROIIE!.IN AN INSTITUTION Fort SCHIZOPHRENIC MOTHERS AND 104 CONTROL CHILDREN IS.DE·
CRIMItIAL PSVICliQ,PATHS. "V J. NIELSEN, T. 18U8OI,
D. TUViER. J. '1'. JEMSE", and d. SACHS. MUNKSGAARD,
SCRIBED, AND SUBSEQUENT RESEARCH TO BE PRESENTED IN
FOLLOWING CHAPTERS IS INTRODUCED. :
.NOERRE SO'c:GADE 35, DK·1370 COPENHAGEN K, DEN· SponIOf'lng Agency: NORTHEASTERN FAMILY INSTITUTE. INC. 15A
MARK. ACTA PSYCHIATRIC SCANDINAV/CA, V 45. N 4 SEWALL STREE1, MARBLEHEAD MA 01945.
(1OG9); ~ 403-42~\. NC.J.1562H
THIS STUDY EXAMINES THE PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF 243. PROSPEcnVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS OF CRIMINALITY,
THE XYY SVNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S SYNDROME (47, XV¥) 2-A DESCRIPnON OF REGISTERED CRIMINALITY IN
'lNA SAMI)LE OF ~~5 INMATES OF A bANISH ItiSTITUTION FOR THE HIOH-RISK MID LOW-AISK FAMILIES (fR0t4 BIOSO-
THECR.IMINALLY INSANE. CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. 1077, BY SARt4QFF
A MEDNICK.H"';SEE NCJ.47285). By .. '''L
Ht. PREV,A,UZ,fiCE 0' jEPILEPSY AMONG PRISONERS. Ov J. KIRKEOAAMD-S()f;Et:.,ClEt4 and S. A. MEQNICK. GARI):
Co GUNK. ROVAI. SOCIETY OF MEDICINE, .2 QUEEN NER PRESS. INC, 19 UNION SQUARE W['ST, NEW VORK
ANNE S7/REET, lONDON W1M OaR, ENGLAND. PRO. NY 10003. 15 P. 1977, NCJ.472t4
.a1GoINGs OF THe ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINf;. V 62, THE KINDS AND AMOUNTS OF REGISTERED CRIMlt-IALlTV IN FAMI·
'N'~- (JANUARY 1969), P 60-63. t,ICJ.~94 LIES WITH A SCHIZOPHRENIC MOTHER ARE DESCRIBED.
THIs $TI)DY INlJeS,.ICIA'I'ES THE PREVALEtJCE OF EPILEPSY SupplefMnlii Mdt. REPRINTED FROM JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL
AMdN<H'AIS;ONERSIN olrrEtfl;lONCENTERS IN ENGLAND AND PSYCHOLOGY (1975), 64.
WALE$. [)AT" FOPt 'ffll! STUDY WERE GATHERED THROUGH SUR· Sponaortng AgenCy: NORTHEASTERN FAMILV INSTITUTE.mC, 15A
VEYS OF' PRlf$ON MEDICAl.. OFFiCERS, . ' SEWALL STREET, MARBLEHEAD MA.01945. .

~ ,. ' ,.: ..
PSYCHOPATHY

244. PIIOIPECTIVI!.roo'f OF fIftEDICTORS OF CRIMINALITY, A PHYSIOlOGICAl. MODEL OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IS OUT·


S ILECTftODIRIW.. iMIPOHR 'ATTEAHS (FROM BIO- LINED. }\L()NG WITH ITS IMPlJeATIONS FOR THE PHYSIOLOGICAL
IOCIALIA8D OF CRIWIW. BEHAVIOR, 1877, BY SAR· CONTROL OF HOSTILITY ANp AGGRESSION.
HOFFA Ml1JNICK ANI) KARL 0 CHRISTIANS£N-SEE SUpplemental Hotel: REPRINTEb FROM CONTROL OF AGGRES-
NC.fo472U). BY J. LOIiJ and .. A. MEDNICK. GARD- SION AND VlOLENCE, COGNITIVE AND PHYSIOLOG.ICAL. 1971.
NER PRESS. INC. 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW VORK
NY 10003. 10 P. 1971. NCJ.47205
m.psYcHOPATH-A COMPREHENSIVE STUDY OF ANTISO-
THS ELECTRODERMAL FUNCTIONING OF SUBJECTS PRIOR TO CIAL DISORDERS AND 6EHAVIORS. W. If. REID. lEd.
Am REGISTERING OF ASOCIAL ACTS IS MEASURED AND THEN BRUNNER/MAZEt., INC. 19 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK NY
CORRELATED WITH ~V DELiNOUENT BEHAVIOR SUSSEQUENTLY 10003. 365 p. 1978. NCJ.e75tO
RECORDED. THIS ANTHOLOGY ON THE PSYCHOPATHIC DIMENSIoNS OF ANTI·
~ Agency: NORTHEASTERN FAMILY INSTITUTE, INC, 15A
SOCIAL DISORDERS AND BEHAVIORS PROVIDES INTRODUCTORY
SEWAll. STREET, MARBLEHEAD MA 011M5. PERSPECTIVES ON Pl3YCHOPATHY. ExAMINES ITS GENETIC AND
ENVIRONMENrAl CORRELATES. AND NOTES TREATMENT AP·
PROACHES.
245. PSYCHIATRIC DISOROERS AND CRIMINAL RECIDlYISM-
A'FOLLOWoUP 8'I1JI)Y OF FEMALE CRIMIHALS. By C. R. AvaIlabIlfiy: Bf:{UNNER/MAZEL. INC, 19 UNION SQUARE, NEW
CLONINGER lind S. B. OUZE. AMERICAN MEDICAL AS- YORK NY 10003•.
SOCIATION, 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO IL
80610. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 29, N 251. PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-A BIBUOGRAPHY. By Fl.
2 (AUGUST 1973), P 266-269. NCJ.57138 D. HARE and A. S. HARE. EXCERTA CRIMINOLOGICA
FOVNDATION, 119·123 HERENGRACHT, AMSTEADAM-C.
THIS ARTICLE REPORTS A PSYCHIATRIC STUDY OF 66 PAROLED, THE NETHERLANDS. EXCERPTA CRIMINOLOG/CA. V 7,
FEMALE FELONS, AND THE FOL\.OWUP INVESTIGATION OF THEIR N 4,(JULY/AUGUST 100n, P 365-386. NC-J.5752e
FlECIDIVISM 2 TO 3 YEARS AFTER PAROLE; 33 PERCENT OF THE THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS A PORTION OF AN EXTENSIVE BIBLlOG·
WOMEN WERE REAR~ESTED AT LEAST ONCE. RAPHY INCLUDING BOOKS AND JOURNALS PUaLlSHED IN ENG·
L1SH ON THE SUBJECT OF PSYCHOPATHY.
2.... PsYCHIATRIC STUDIES OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN SponIorIng Agency: CANADA DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL
PENmNTIARY INMATES (FROM NEURAL PASES OF VIO- HEALTH AND WELFARE. HEALTH PROGRAMS BRANCH. OTTOWA,
LENCE AND AGGREISION. 117$. BY W S FIELDS AND W OTTOWA KIA 184, CANADA K/A 134.
H 1WEET-8I!E NCJ.61I520). ley F. R. ERVIN. WARREN
H GREEN, INC, 10 SOUTH BRENlWOOD BOULEVARD, ST 252. PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-APPROACHES TO RE-
LOUIS Me 63105. 10 p. 1975. NCJ.57525 SEARCH. R. D. HARE tend D. SCHALLINO, EdL JOHN
THIS ARTICLE FROM THE SYMFOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIO· WRIGHT AND SONS, LTO, 42-44 TRIANGLE WEST, BRISTOL
LENCe AND AGGRESSION EXAMINES THE METHODOLOGICAL ass 1EX, ENGLAND. 396 p. 1976. United Kingdom,
NCJ.5715OO
PROSLEMS OF STUDYING VIOLENT PRISONERS AND GIVING
THEM PROPER MEDICAL TREATMENT. BASED ON PAPERS FROM THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGA·
NIZATION'S ADVANCED STUDY INSTITUTE HELD IN FRANCE IN
1975, THIS VOLUME REVIEWS APPROACHES TO THEORY AND RE·
247. PSVCHOEDUCATIOHAL DIAGN08TIC SERVICES FOR SEARCH IN PSYcHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR.
LEARNING DllABLED vOl1TH8-RESEAncH PROCE-
DURES. s. BARRoWS, P. B. CAMPBELl., B. A.
l!ly T. AVil/abillty: JOHN WILEY AND SQNS, 605 THIRD AVENUE, NEW
YORK NY 10016.
~UGHTER. ""' Y. L. tRAINOR. EDUCATIONAL TeST·
INGSERVICE. PRINCETON NJ 08540. 39 p. 1971.
NPJ-48418 263. PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVfOR-SOME RECENT THEORY
AND RESEARCH (FROM ADVANCED IN EXPERIMENTAL
THE DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES EMPLOYED IN A RESEARCH AND CUNICAL PSYCHOLOGY. 1171. BY HARRY E ADAMS AND
DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM INVESTIGATING THE RELATIONSHIP WILLIAM K BOARDMAN); By R. D. HARE. PERGAMON
BETWEEN SPECIFIC LEARNING OISABILmES (LD) AND JUVENILE PRESS, INC, MAXWELL HOUSE, FAIRVIEW PARK, ELMS.
DELINQUENCY ARE OUTLINED. FORD NY 10523. 48 p. 1971. NCJ.61470
~ Agency: \JS DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN· THE PEASONALITY CHARACTERISTICS OF BOTH PRIMARY AND
FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL INSTITUTE SECONDARY PSYCHOPATHS ARE DISCUSSED, IN ADDITION TO
OF JUVENILE JUSTICE" DEUNQUENCY PAEVENTION. WASHING. RESEARCH FINDINGS ON THE AUTONOMIC AND CORTICAl. COR·
TION, DC 20531. RE.LATES OF PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR.
St}Oll~ Agtnefw. CANADIAN MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION,
A~ NOJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
52 ST CLAIR AVENUE EAST, TORONTO M4T 1MO, CANADA;
CANADA DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL HEALTH AND WELFARE,
" 2.... PSYCHOL.OOICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL INVESTlQATlON HEALTH PROGRAMS BRANCH, OTTOWA, OTTOWA KIA 184,
OF XVV PRISONIRS. By At W. GRIFFITHS, B. W. RICIif CANADA KIA 134.
ARDS, .t, ZARI!M8A. T. ABRAMOWICZ. and mwART.
MACMIlLAN PRESS LTO, LITTLE ESSEX STREET. LONDON. 2154. PSYCHOPATHOLOGY IN ADOPTEI);AWAV OfFSPRING OF
ENGLAND. NATURE, V 227, N 6255 (JULY 1970), P BIOLOGIC PARENTS WITH ANTlSOCIIiL BEHA'IIOR. By
:29().292. NCJ.5OItf R. J. CADORET. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 635
NINE 'INY PRISONERS, 71 INCHES TALL,AND OVER, AND NINE NORTH Oi:ARBORN STRI:E:i, CHICAGO IL 60610. AR·
CHIVES OP GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 35, III 2 (FEBRU.
tMTCHED CONl'ROlS WERE ADMINISTERED A BATTERY OF PSY· ARY 1078), P 176-184. tfCJo58423
CHOLOGICAI,. TESTS AND INTERVIEWED ON THEIR SOCIOLOGICAL
THIS STUDY EXAMINES THE ADOPTED-AWAY OFFSPRING OF 1310.
HISTORII;S TO ASSESS GROUP DIFFERENCES.
LOGIC PARENTS WITH ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY ¢R BEHAVIOR
IN ORDER TO DETERMINE IF THe ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR IS AS.
24•• "Y~Y Of AOOAESSIDN AND THE IMpUCAnoN$ SOCIi\TeO WITHAM ANTISOCIAL alOLOGIO BACKGROUND.
FOR AGQftIPIOH CONTJH)L (FROM HUMAN AGME$o
lION "Ifb DANGEROU$.MES9." 117'* BY D 2155, PSVCHOPATHY. 8V R; f). HARE. 30 p, 1971.
J..AIERGE';ALTMEJD-~E NC;...a1"'4~ ey. K. E. MOVl:R,
IIliSTITUT PHIUPPE PINEL DE MONTREAl.., 12. 333I;lOULE. c:arP. ·NCJi.15#U
THE coNCePl' OF PSVCHOPATHY AND THE WAYS IN WHICH sVe-
canada.. NCJ.57,.
VARD, MONTReAL, QO\:f3EC .-78, CANAOA. 40 p, . 1078.
JECTS ARE $EU:creo FOR AESEARQH ON PSYCHOPATHOLOGY

21
PSYCHOPATHY The Etiology

ARE DISCUSSED, AND AN OVERVIEW OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAl: LTD, 42-44 TRIANGLE WEST, BRISTOL BS8 1EX, ENGLAND.
CORRELATES OF PSYCHOPATHY IN ADULTS IS PRESENTED. 24 p. 1975. United Kingdom. NCJ.574"
THE PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS OF BOTH PRIMARY AND
2541. PSYCHOPATHY AND AUTONOMIC CONDmONING. By n. SECONDARY PSYCHOPATHS ARE DISCUSSED, ALONG WITH RE·
D. HARE and M. J. QUINN. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION, 1200 17TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC SEARCH FINDINGS ON THE AUTONOMIC AND CORTICAL CORRE·
20036. JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 77, LATES OF PSYCHOPATHY.
N 3 (JUNE 1971), P 223·235. NCJ.55030
EXPERIMENTS WITH AUTOMATIC CONDITIONING ARE STUDIED TO 263. PSYCHOPATHY, PERSONALITY, AND GENETICS (F M
DETERMINE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GROUPS OF PSYCHOPATH· PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR-APPROACHES TO RE·
IC AND NONPSYCHOPATHIC INMATES WHEN SUBJECTED TO UN· SEARCH, 1S711, BY R D HARE AND D SCHAWNO-SEE
CONDITIONED STIMULI OTHER THAN ELECTRIC SHOCK. NCJ.57500). By H. J. EYSENCK and S. B. G. EYSENCK.
JOHN WRIGHT AND SONS, LTD, 42-44 TRIANGLE WEST,
Sponaorlng Agency: CANADIAN MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION, BRISTOL BS8 1EX, ENGLAND. 27 p. 1978. United
52 ST CLAIR AVENl~E EAST, TORONTO M4T 1M9, CANADA. Kingdom. NCJ.57503
257. PSYCHOPATHY AND ELECTRODERMAL RESPONSES TO THE GENETIC INFLUENCES ON PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR AND
NONSIGNAL STIMULATION. By R. D. HARE. THE RELATION BETWEEN SUCH BEHAVIOR AND PERSONALITY
NORTH·HOLLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY, JAN VAN GA· ARE NOTED IN SUPPORT OF A DIMENSIONAL RATHER THAN A
LENSTR 335, AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS. BIOLOGICAL CATEGORICAL APPROACH TO THE CLASSIFICATION OF PSYCHO·
PSYCHOLOGY, V 8 (1978), P 237·246. NCJ.55033 PATHIC BEHAVIOR.
ELECTRODERMAL RESPONSES OF PSYCHOPATHIC AND NONPSY·
CHOPATHIC INMATES TO NONSIGNAL STIMULATIONS WERE EX· 2M. PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY IN THE PREVENTION"lF ANTI·
AMINED ON THE SUPPOSITION THAT THE PSYCHOPATHS WOULD SOCIAL AND DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR. By J. \1. SAT·
HAVE HIGHER RESPONSE RATES TO INTENSE STiMULI. TERFIELD and D. P. CANTWELL. US DEPARTMENT OF
THE ARMY EDGEWOOD ARSENAL. INTERNA TlONAL
2:511. PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY IN A JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH. V 4, N 1·2 (SPRINGI
MIXED·MOTIVE GAME SITUATION. By R. D. HARE and SUMMER 1975), P 227·237. NCJ·57137
D. CRAIG EN. SOCIETY FOR PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL
RESEARCH, 2380 LISA LANE, ROUTE 2, MADISON WI EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE THAT HYPERACTIVITY (MINIMAL BRAIN
53711. PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, Vii, N 2 (MARCH 1974), DYSFUNCTION) IN CHILDREN IS A PRECURSOR OF JUVENILE DE·
P 197·208. NCJ.15e510 LINQUENCY AND ADULT SOCIOPATHY IS REVIEWED, AND TREAT·
THIS STUDY INVESTIGATES SOME OF THE BEHAVIORAL AND MENT IMPLICATIONS ARE DISCUSSED.
PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES OF PSYCHOPATHS IN INTERACTION
SITUATIONS USING A TWO·PERSON GAME IN WHICH A PLAYER'S 285. PSYCHOSOCIAL AND ELECTROENGEPHALOGRAPHIC
ACTION HAS SPECIFIC OUTCOMES FOR BOTH PLAYERS. STUDIES OF EGYPTIAN MURDERERS. By A. OKASHA, A.
SADEK, and S. A. MONEIM. HEADLEY BROS LTD, ASH·
2511. PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO FORD, KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH JOURNAL
THREAT OF AN AVERSIVE STIMULUS. By R. D. HARE, J. OF PSYCHIATRY, V 126 (JANUARY 1976), P 34·40.
FRAZELLE, and D. N. COX. SOCIETY FOR PSYCHOPHY· NCJ·541I1541
SIOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2380 LISA LANE, ROUTE 2, MADI· PSYCHOSOCIAL AND ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC (EEG) STUD·
SON WI 53711. PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, V 15, N 2 IES WERE CONDUCTED ON A SAMPLE OF 90 MALE AND FEMALE
(MARCH 1978), P 168·172. NCJ.565011 MURDERERS TO DETERMINE FACTORS POSSIBLY ASSOCIATED
POSSIBLE SIMILARITIES IN THE REACTION OF PSYCHOPATHS TO WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR.
THREAT OF AN AUDITORY STIMULUS AND THREAT OF AN ELEC-
TRIC SHOCK (I.E., LOW ELECTRODERMAL AND HIGH CARDIOVAS·
261. PSYCHOSURGERY FOR THE CONTROL OF VIOLENCE-A
CULAR AROUSAL) ARE INVESTIGATED. CRITICAL REVIEW (FROfjj NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE
AND AGGRESSIOf4, 11175, BY W S FIELDS AND W H
260. PSYCHOPATHY AND RESPONSE TO ELECTRICAL STlMU· SWEET-SEE NCJ·57520). By P. R. BREGOIN.
LATION. By R. D. HARE and S. A. THORVALDSON. WARREN H GREEN, INC, 10 SOUTH BRENTWOOD BOULE·
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 1200 17TH VARD, ST LOUIS MO 63105. 29 p. 1975.
STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DC 20038. JOURNAL OF AB· NCJ·57528
NORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, V 76, N 3 (DECEMBER 1970), P
370·374. NCJ.554122 THIS ARTICLE FROM A SYMPOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIO·
USING 14 PSYCHOPATHIC AND 14 NONPSYCHOPATHIC INMATES LENCE REVIEWS THE HISTORY OF THE TECHNIQUES OF LOBOTO·
OF THE BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA, PENITENTIARY, A FORCED MY AND AMYGDALOTOMY, AND ADVOCATES THE CESSATION OF
CHOICE PROCEDURE WAS USED TO DETERMINE THE ?ETECTION THEIA USE UNTIL A LINK BETWEEN BRAIN DAMAGE AND VIO·
THRESHOLP FOR ELECTRICAL STIMULATION. LENCE IS PROVEN.
SponlOrlng Agency: CANADIAN MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION,
52 ST CLAIR AVENUE EAST, TORONTO M4T 1M9, CANADA. 287. READING RETARDATION, DYSLEXIA AND DELINQUENCY.
By E. M. R. CRITCHLEY. HEADLEY BROS LTD, ASH·
261. PSYCHOPATHY, FEAR AROUSAL AND ANTICIPATED FORO, KENT TN24 8HH, ENGLAND. BRITISH JOURNAL
PAIN. By R, D. HARE. PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS, OF PSYCHIATRY, V 114, N 517 (DECEMBER 1988), P
BOX 9229, MISSOULA MT 69807. PSYCHOLOGICAL RE· 1537·1647. NCJ·570011
PORTS, V 16 (APRIL 19850. P 499·602. NCJ.551fjll A STUDY OF READING DISABILITY AMONG YOUTHS REFERRED BY
TWO GROUPS OF STUDENTS, SELECTED ON THE BASIS OF THEIR THE COURTS TO A CLASSIFICATION CENTER IN LONDON, ENG·
EXTREME SCORES ON A PSYCHOPATHIC DEVIATE SCALE OF A LAND, IS REPORTED.
PERSONALITY INVENTORY, WERE USED TO STUDY THE RELA·
TION BETWEEN PSYCHOPATHY, FEAR AROUSAL, AND ANTICIPAT·
2611. REIlUCTION OF CRIME THRU THE PREVENTION AND
EO PAIN, TREATMENT OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, By J. A.
WACKER. 10 p. 1974. NCJ·18375
262. FlSYCHOPATHY (FROM RESEARCH IN PSYCHOPHyelQ..
LOGY, 1976, BY PETER H VENABLES AND MARGARET J THE NEED FOR RESEARCH ON CAUSES AND TREATMENT OF BIO·
CHRISTIE). By R, D. HARE. JOHN WAIGHT AND SONS, LOGICAL MALFUNCTIONING IS DISCUSSED, AND A REVIEW OF

22
of Criminality REVIEW

THE LITERATURE ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LEARNING NCJCJ·NDM (NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JUVENILE COURT
PROBLEMS AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY IS PRESENTED. JUDGES-NATIONAL DISTRICT ATTORNEYS ASSOCIATION) FIFTH
ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON JUVENILE JUSTICE.
lIIoneo.1;1O Agency: U S DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, LAW EN- Sponaortng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN·
FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMIN, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF LAW FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL INSTITUTE
ENFORCEMENT AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE. OF JUVENILE JUSTICE & DELINQUENCY PREVENTION, WASHING·
A~': NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM. TION. DC 20531.
Availability: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
28t. RELATION OF CRIME TO NUTRITION. By A. HOFFER
PACIFIC NORTHWEST HUMANIST PUBLICATIONS, POBOX 274. RELUCTANT DELINQUENT. By I. EISENBERG. A. CIM-
167, VICTORIA, Be V8W 2M8, CANADA. HUMANIST IN QUEGRANA, Ed. LAWREN PRODUCTIONS, INC, POBOX
c:::.4NADA; V 8, N 3 (AUGUST 1975), P 2·9. NCJ.57280 666, MENDOCINO CA 95460. 1977. NCJ.48e22
THIS FILM SHOWS HOW YOUTHS WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
THE NUTRmONAL BASES OF CRIME, PARTICULARLY VITAMIN DE· ARE SOMETIMES FORCED INTO DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR WHEN
FICIENCIES AND ALLERGIC REACTIONS TO CERTAIN FOODS, ARE THEIR DISABILITIES ARE NOT RECOGNIZED.
DISCUSSED, ALONG WITH THE PROPER ROLE OF PUNISHMENT SUppltmtntal HotH: 24 MINUTES. 16MM COLOR, 1977 THE KIT IN·
AND EFFECTIVE TREATMENT RESPONSES FOR OFFENDERS. CLUDES FILM AND A 10·PAGE STUDY GUIDE-DO YOU KNOW A
RELUCTANT DELINQUENT.
270. RELATION OF DEVIANT SYMPTOMS AND BEHAVIOR IN A SponaorIng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN·
NORMAL POPULATION TO SUBSEQUENT DELINQUENCY FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION.
AND ...\LADJUSTMENT. By T. TAYLOR and D. C. WATT. Availability: LAWREN PRODUCTIONS, INC, POBOX 666, MENDO-
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, BENTLEY HOUSE, 200 CINO CA 95460. (KI1)
EUSTON ROAD, LONDON NW1 2DB, ENGLAND. PSYCHO-
LOGICAL MEDICINE, 1/ 1, N 1 (FEBRUARY 1977). P 275. REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES IN
183-169. NCJ·6744t MENTALLY RETARDED MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A
MORE THAN e.oOO ORDINARY SCHOOL CHILDREN WERE STUDIED PSYCHOLOOICAL STUDY OF PATIENTS WITH XVY AND
XXVY KARYOTYPES. By J. BECKMANN, A. DUPONT, I.
IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, ENGLAND, TO DETERMINE THE FREQUEN· ERLING, P. JACOBSEN, M. MIKKELSEN, and A. THEIL·
CY DISTRIBUTION OF SYMPTOMS AND BEHAVIOR CORRELATED aMRD. NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR MENTALLY HANDI·
WITH SUBSEQUENT DELINQUENCY AT SPECIFIED AGE LEVELS. CAPPED CHILDREN, PEMBRIOOE HALL, 17 PEMBRIDGE
SQUARE, LONDON W2 4EP, ENGLAND. JOURNAL OF
271. RELATION OF PSYCHOLOGIC MEASURES OF AGGRES- MENTAL DEFICIENCY RESEARCH, V 18, N 4 (DECEMBER
1974), P 331·341. NCJ·6tl381
SION AND HOSTILITY TO TESTOSTERONE PRODUCTION
IN MAN. By H. PERSKY, K. D. SMITH, and a. K. BASU. CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES AMONG MENTALLY RETARDED
ELSEVIER NORTH·HOLLAND, INC 52 VANDERBILT DANISH MALE OFFENDERS ARE EXAMINED, AND THE CHARAC-
AVENUE, NEW YORK NY 10017. PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDI· TERISTICS OF CHROMOSOMALLY ABNORMAL OFFENDERS ARE
CINE, V 33, N 3 (MAY/JUNE 1971), P 265-277. ANALYZED.
NCJ.H2H
278. RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE. By D. J. WEST, P. WILES,
THIS STUDY INVESTIGATES THE RELATION OF PSYCHOLOGICAL lind C. STANWOOD. UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INSTI·
MEASURES OF AGGRESSION AND HOSTILITY TO TESTOSTERONE TUTE OF CRIMINOLOGY, 7 WEST ROAD, CAMBRIDGE CB3
PRODUCTION RATES IN 18 HEALTHY YOUNG MALES, 15 HEALTHY 9DT, ENGLAND. 124 p. NCJ.18313
OLDER MALES, AND 8 DYSPHORIC MALE PATIENTS. RESEARCH IN CRIMINAL VIOLENCE WITH OVER 2,000 CITATIONS.
8ponaorIng Ag4tncy: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, Avalloblllty: UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INSTITUTE OF CRIMINOL·
AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, 5600 OGY. 7 WEST ROAD, CAMBRIDGE C83 9DT, ENGLAND.
FISHERS LANE, ROCKVILLE, MD 20852.
m. RETARDED READERS AND ANTI-8OCIAL YOUNG
PEOPLE-AN ENOLIGH STUDY. By S. S. SEGAL As-
1172. FlELATIONS BETWEEN PSYCHOPATHY AND PERSISTENT SOCIATION FOR PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT OF OFFEND·
CRIMINALITY-METHODOLOOICAL AND THEORETICAL ERS, 199 GLOUCESTER pLACE. LONDON NW1 6BU. ENG·
I$SUES (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR-AP- LAND. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THER·
PROACHES TO RESEARC~ 1171, BY R D HARE AND D APY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY, V 17, N 3
SCHAWNQ-SEE NCJ.67I1oo). Bf a. TRASLER. JOHN (1973), P 297·302. MCJ.13112
WRIGHT AND SONS, LTD, 42...... TRIANGLE WEST, BRISTOL
BOO 1EX, ENGLAND. 28 p. 1978. United Kingdom. THE COINCIDENCE OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND BACKWARD-
NCJ-II7I105 NESS IN SCHOOL SUGGESTS THAT THE FORMER MAY BE DUE TO
THE EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCE9 OF THE LATTER.
THIS ARTICLE EXAMINES THE THEORETICAL PRECEPTS OF THE
CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM AND THE MECHANISMS OF SOClAL 278. ReVIEW OF CURRENT RESEARCH (FROM BRAIN Dya-
CONTROL, ESPECIALLY AS THEY RELAT!: TO INDIVIDUALS WHO i'UNCTION IN AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 117', BY RUS-
ARE UNDERSOCIALIZED BUT NOT PSYCHOPATHIC. SELL R MONROE-SEE NCJ·5S11I). By R. R. MONROE
and J. R. LION. HEATH LEXINGTON BOOKS, 126 SPRING
STREET, LEXINGTON MA 02173. 46 p. 1978.
273. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SELF-REPORTED JUVENILE NCJ·63121
DELINQUENCY AND LEARNING DISABILITIF,s-A PRE·
THIS PAPER UPDATES THROUGH 1977 MONROE'S 1970 MONO-
L1MINARV LOOK AT THE DATA. By P. K. BRODER, G. W.
PETERS, and J. ZIMMERMAN. 26 p. 1977. GRAPH .'EPISODIC BEHAVIORAL DISORDER,' WHICH REVIEWS
NCJ.48417 AMERICAN AND ENGLISH LITERATURE AND ESTABLISHES CRITE·
RIA TO DISCRIMINATE BETWEEN EPILEPTOID AND MOTIVATED
PRELIMINARY DATA ARE REPORTED FROM A RESEARCH AND DISORDER.
DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM INVESTIGATING THE LINK BETWEEN
SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITIES (LD) AND JUVENILE DELlN· 271. REVIEW OF STUDIES OF CRIMINALITY AMONG TWINS
QUENCY•. (FROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977,
BY ~RNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 CHRIBTIANSEN-
SUppltrMntal Not.1: PREPARED FOR PRESENTATION AT THE SEE NCJ-47286). By K. O. CHRISTIANSEN. GARDNER

23
$EARCH The Etiology

PRESS. INC. 19 UNION SQUARE WEST. NEW YORK NY NAL OF MENTAL SUBNORMALITY. V 15, N 28, PART 1
10003. 44 p. 1977. NCJ..4~2" P 31-44.
-.J'. (JUNE 1969), NCJ·57""
THE PROBLEMS AND RESULTS OF 9 CRIMINOLOGICAL 'rwlN IN- THIS ~RTICLE SUMMARIZES THE STATE OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE
VESTIGATIONS ARE REVIEWED. ALONG WITH CRIMINOLOGICALLY FIELD 'OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES, THEIR ASS
RELEVANT CASES KNOWN BY THE AUTHOR IN WHICH MONOZY- ATIONS WITH PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS, AND THEIR T
GOTIC TWINS HAVE BEEN REARED APART. WITH AGGRESSION AND MENTAL SUBNORMALITY.

280. SEARCH FOR XVY SYNDROME IN PSYCHIATRICALLY 1)19- 2'7. SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN KLINEFELTE
TURDED CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENT JUVENILE DEUN~ DROM!:. By H. D. MOSIER, L. W. SCOTT, Ind H • DING-
QUENTS-A PRELIMINARY REPORT. By J. C. DUfFY MAN. C V MOSBY COMPANY, 11836 WESTLINE INDUS-
• nd J. CERVENKA. HUMAN SCIENCES PRESS. 72 FIFTH TRIAL DRIVE, ST LOUIS MO 63141. 3 p. 1960•
AVENUE. NEW YORK NY 10011. CHILD PSYCHIATRY NCJ·55217
AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, V 2. N 1 (FALL 1971). P UNKS BETWEEN SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIOR AND A DISORDER
50-53. NCJ.&e3D1 CHARACTERIZED IN PART BY THE PRESENCE OF FEMALE GENET·
A SAMPLE OF 46 JUVENILE PATIENTS REFERRED TO PSYCHIA- IC MATERIAL ARE EXPLORED IN A STUDY OF MALE PATIENTS IN
TRISTS FOR VIOLENT AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR WERE r::STED STATE MENTAL HOSPITALS.
TO DETERMINE THE LIKELIHOOD Tl-IAT THESE PATIENTS HAVE SUpplcmantal Notea: REPRINTED FROM JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS,
XYY CHROMOSOMES. V 57, N 3 (SEPTEMBER 1960), P 479-483.
SUpplemental Not..: PRESENTED AT THE FIFTH WORLD CON-
GRESS OF PSYCHIATRY, NOVEMBER 25-DECEMBER 4, 111,71. HI. SKIN CONDUCTANCE RECOVERY IN ANTI-SOCIAL ADO-
MEXICO. LESCENTS (FROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BE·
HAVIOR, 1D77, BY SAflNOFF A MEDNICK ANP KARL 0
281. SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES AND CRIME. By CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ-47285). By D. A. T. SIDDLE,
W. H. BOON, C. T. SENG, Ind N. S!NGH. FAR EAST S. A. MEDNICK, A. R. NICOL, Ind R. H. FOGGITT. GARD-
TRADE PRESS LTD. 1913 HANGLUNG CENTRE, HONG NER PRESS, INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW YORK
KONG. MODERN MIif:)ICINE OF ASIA. V 14. N 11 (NO- NY 10003. 4 p. 1917. NCJ-472t2
VEMBER 1978) P 11-15. NCJ-5fJID5 THE HYPOTHESIS THAT THE ELECTRODERMAL RESPONSE (EDR)
A SEX CHROMOSOME SCREENING OF 1,506 MALE INMATES AT A LONGER AS THE DEGREE OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR INCREASED
MAXIMUM SECURITY PRISON IN SINGAPORE IS REPORTED, AND IS EXAMINED IN ADOLESCENTS.
THE LINK BETWEEN CRIMINALITY AND CHROMOSOME ABNOR- SUpplemental Notet: REPRINTED FROM BRITISH JOURNAL OF
MAI.lTIES IS QUESTIONED. SOCIAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY (1976). 15.
SpoMorIng Agency: NORTHEASTERN FAMILY INSTITUTE, INC, 15A
282. SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES-HOW STRONG IS SEWALL STREET, MARBLEHEAD MA 01945.
THE LINK WITH CRIME? By W. H. PRICE. SANFORD
EVANS PUBLISHING LTD. MANITOBA MEDICAL REVIEW, 21D. SOME EFFECTS OF NICOTIHI~ AN!:' .\SCORBIC ACIDS ON
V 48, N 1 (JANUARY 1988), P 28-27. NCJ.5700e THE BEHAVIOR OF INSTITUTIONALIZl:D ,JUVENILE DEUN-
THIS ARTICLE REPORTS THAT NEARLY 3 PERCENT OF THE MALE QUENTS (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCUEMICAL APPROACHES
POPULATION OF A SCOTIISH MAXIMUM SECURITY FACILITY HAVE TO TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS..., 1978, BY L J HIPP.
AN XYY SEX CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT, AND ALL THESE HAVE CHEN-SEE NCJ·50444). By M. iE. WARE. VAN NOS-
A RECORD OF PERVERTED AND IRRESPONSIBLE BEHAVIOR. TRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD STREET, NEW YORK
NY 10001. 28 p. 1978. NCJ.50452
283. SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES IN MENTALLY RE· THIS REPORT SUMMARIZES FINDNGS WHICH LED RESEARCHERS
TARDED CRIMINALS. By M. MIKKELSEN Ind I. ERLING. TO BELIEVE THAT MEGAVITAMIN THEORY MIGHT BENEFIT DELIN-
SPRINGER-VERLAG, 175 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK NY QUENT YOUTHS. DETAILS ARE PRESENTED OF A PILOT STUDY
10010. JOURNAL OF LEGAL MEDICINE, V 69, N 3 OF 45 BOYS IN A VIRGINIA STATE INSTITUTION.
(1971), P 157·160. NCJ·5fJ123
DURING A HEAR PERIOD, BOTH FIRST OFFENDERS AND RECIDI· 2110. SOME GENETIC ASPECTS OF ALCOHOLISM AND CRIMI-
VISTS UNDER THE CARE OF A COPENHAGEN (DENMARK) CENTER NALITY. BV M. BOHMAN. AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSO-
FOR THE MENTALLY RETARDED WERE EXAMINED CYTOGENETI· CIATION, 535 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO IL
CALLy TO DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE OF XYY MALES. 60010. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 35, N
3 (MARCH 1978), P 269-276. NCJ.52320
284. SEX CHROMOSOME AN~UPLOIDY AND CRIMINAL BEHAV· DATA ON APPROXIMATELY 2,000 SWEDISH ADOPTEES AND THEIR
lOR. By W. M. C. BROWN, P. A. JACOBS, Ind W. H. BIOLOGICAL AND ADOPTIVE PARENTS ARE ANALYZED TO EX·
PRICE. ACADEMIC PRESS LTD, 24·28 OVAL ROAD, PLORE THE POSSIBILITY OF A GENETIC DETERMINANT OF ALCO·
LONDON NW1, ENGLAND. EUGENICS SOCIETY SYMPO- HOLISM AND CRIMINALITY.
SIA, V 4 (1968), P 180-193. NCJ·570fl
AN OVERVIEW OF RESEARCH INTO SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR· 2D1. SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE LINK BETWEEN LEARN-
MALITIES IN BEHAVIORALLY DISTURBED MALES IS PRESENTED. INO DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY. By".
ZIMMERMAN, W. D. RICH, I. KEILlTZ, and P. K. BRODER.
285. SEX CHROMOSOMES AND CRIME. AMERICAN COLLEGE NATIONAL CENTER FOR STATE COURTS MID.ATLANTIC
OF PHYSICIANS, 4200 PINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA PA REGIONAL OFFICE, r..oLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY. P 0
19104. ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, V 69, N 1 BOX FG, WILLIAMSBURG VA 23185. 43 p. 1978.
(JULY 1968), P 399-401. NCJ·se3go NCJ.50051
AN OVERVIEW IS PROVIDED OF THE RESULTS OF MEDICAL RE· A TOTAL OF 887 DELINQUENT AND 1,005 NONDELINQUENT
SEARCH CONDUCTED BETWEEN 1982 AND 1968 LINKING ABNOR- YOUTH WERE SCREENED FOR LEARNING DISABILITIES, THEN
MAL sex CHROMOSOME COMPLEMEN' ~ IN MALES WITH Cf\IMI· WERE ASKED ABOUT DELINQUENT BEHAVIORS. NO SIGNIFICANT
NAL AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR, PARTICULARLY AGGRESSION. DIFFERENCES COULD BE RELATED TO LEARNING DISABILITY.
Sponsoring Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LAW EN·
28& SEX DETERMINATION, MENTAL SUBNORMALITY, CRIME FORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION OFFICE OF JUVENILE
AND DELINQUENCY IN MALE&. By W. H. PRICE. BRIT- JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION, WASHINGTON, DC
ISH SOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF MENTAL SUBNORMALIT, 20531.
MONYHULL HOSPITAL, BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND. JOUR· Availability: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.

24.
., .'

.j

of Criminality

"
212. SOME THEORETICAL PRINCIPLES I!W1IC To ortntdMo- ;~aL -SURVEY OF Y C..nOMOSOME VARIANTS AND-PERSON-
LECULAR PSYCHIATRIC TR£ATIIEHT' ::.,,",* , AUTYIN 431 BORSTAL UDS AND 2M ~ By
ECOLOGIc-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREATIIINT .' J. KAHN,F. S. REED, M. BATES, T. COATE8, and .. ,EV!R-
:=E~~~=trw:;·1~'~J
,. !T1'. INSTITUTE ,FOR THE STUDV AND TREATMENT OF
DEUNrJUENeY, 11 NEW FETTER LANE, lONDON E~
NOSTRAND REINHOLD, 450 WEST 33RD mEeT, NEW P4EE,ENGLAND. BRITISH JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY,
YORK NY 10001. 25 p. 1978. NCJ.5O.M7 , . V 16, N 3 (JULY 1976), P 233-244. NCJ.3OZ44
THE HISTORY, DISCOVERIES, AND THEORIES OF ~CI,I. ~IS P~R /!IEPORTS ON SURVEY FINDINGS, COLI.ECTED OVER
I.AR PSYCHIATRY ARE DISCUSSED. CHEMICAL IMBAlANCES AND THflEI; Yf1ARS.(1969-1972), WITH REGARD TO TWO VARIANTS Of
PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS BOTH CONTRIBUTE TO 5XPLANA· TtlE V C/.iROMO$QME-lONG V AND MARGINALLY LONG Y-AND
TIONS OF BEHAVIOR. THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO DEUNQUENCY.

2N. SPECIFIC READING RETARDATION, HYPERACTIVE CHILD 211; TEMPORAL GRADIENT OF FEAR AROUSAL INf'SYCHO-
SYNDROME, AND JUVENILE oeuNaUEMCY. ;1f'1I. PATHS. , By R. I). HARE. AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
VlRKKUNEN and A. NUunLA. ACTA PSVCHIATRICA ASSOCIATION, 1200 17TH STREET, NW, WASHINGTON DO
SCANDINAVICA, KR 348 MUNKSGAARD, NOEARE SOE· 2003B. JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHoLOGY, V 70,
GADE 35, DK·1370 COPENHAGEN, DENMARK. .ACTA N 6 (DECEMBER 1965), P 442-445. NCH57IO
PSYCHIATRICA SCANIXNAV/CA, V 54 (1976), P 25-28- THE SKIN CONDUCTANCE OF TWO GROUPS OF 11 PSYCHOPA11i.
NCJ.3I02t 10, AND NONPSVCHOPATHIC CRIMINALS AND A THIRD GROUP oF.
REPORT ON A STUDY TO DETERMINE THE EXTENT TO WHICH A NONCRIMINAL CONTROLS WAS MONITORED TO EStABUSH A
SPECIFIC READING RETARDATION LEADS TO CRIMINAL DEVELop· GRADIENT OF FEAn AROUSAL IN PSYCHOPATHS.
MENT IN ADOLESCENTS AND TO WHAT FACTORS SUCH DEVEL·
OPMENT IS DlJE IN THESE C.ASES. .,300. TEIT OF A THEORY OF DEU~ENCy-jDEUNQUEkr
BElfAViORS AMONG ,INSTITUTIONAUZED DRUG ADDICTS
21M. STRESS" AROUSAL, AND JU¥;.I',S4ILE DEUNOtlENCY-HY.
AS . A FUNCnON OF AROUSAL AND THE
POTHE818. By A. R. MAWSON. 11 p. 1978. 8EH8AnON-SEEKINO MOTIVE. By F. H. fARLEY. "-
STEINBERGER. A. COHEN, andH. L BARR. SAGE PUB-
NCH4023 UCATIONS, INC, 275 SOUTH BEVERLY DRIVE, BEVERLY
MUCH DEur'~ENT BEHAVIOR IS THE OUTCOME oF PSYCHO- HILLS CA 90212. CRIMINAL 'JUSTl~ AND BEHAVIOR,
LOGICAL AND BEHAVIORAL CHANGES RESULTING FROM IN- V 6, N 1 (MARCH 1979), P 41-46. NCJ.H1&o
CREASED LEVELS OF TRANSIENT OR CHRONIC AROUSAL DUE TO ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR, PHYSIOLOGICAL AROUSAL THRESHOLDS,
ENVIRONMENT~l STRESS, ENDOGENOUS CHAHGES, OR BOTI:t. AND SENSATION-SEEKING MOTiVeS ARE EXPLORED IN A STUDY
THIS THEORY IS EXAMINED. OF t~5 HOSPITALIZED ADULT MALE DRUG ADDICTS.
IcIppIImentaI NoIM: PRESENTED AT THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF 8poriIorIng Agency: US DEPARTMENT OF HEALtH, EDUCATlQN,
CR~INOlOGY ANNUAL MEETING, DALLAS, TEXAS, NOVEMBER AND WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUse, 11400
1978. . RqcKVlLLE PIKE, ROCKVILLE MD 20852. .
AVIIIIIbIIIty: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
301. THE MAKING OF AN XVY. By Eo ENGEL AMERICAN
ASSOCIATION ON MENTAL DEFICIENCY, 5201 CONNECTI·
211. ITUDlIEI OF PERSONS CONFINED FOR CRIMI!I OF VlO- CUT AVENUE. NW, WASHINGTON DO 20015. AMEIIICAN
LENCE (fROM NEURAL lWIES OF VIOU!NCE. AND AG- JOURNAL OF MENTAL DEFICIENCY, V 77, N 2 (1972), P
0RE88I0N, 1975, BY W 8 FIELDS AND W H 8~"1U 123-127. tK:HIno
NCJo57&20). BV D. WlLUAIII. WAFIREN H GREEN,
INC, 10 SOUTH BRENTWOOD BOULEVARD, ST LOUIS Me GROUNDBREAKING STUDIES OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR AND
63105. 9 p. 1975. NCJoI7&23 MENTAL DUBNORMALITY IN XYV CHROMOSOME MALES ARE RE·
VIEWED, ALONG WITH THE INACCURATE PRESS COVERAGE OF
THIS ARTICLE FROM THE SYMPOSIUM ON NEURAL BASES OF VIO- CHICAGO, ILL. MAS.S MURDERER MISREPORTED AS AN XVY
LENCE AND AGGRESSION PRESENTS FINDINGS OF AN MALE.
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC STUDY OF 333 PRISONERS, SUG·
GESTING ABNORMALITIES IN THE SUBJECTS' BRAIN STEMS. 302. THREE THYROTOXIC CRIMINALS. 8y P. J. DAVIS, J: R.
FlAPPEPORT. J. H. LUTZ; and R. I. GREOI!IUIAN. . AMERI·
2M. STUDY OF JUVENILE DEUNQUEMCY BY TWIN I,IUHOD. CAN COlLEGE OF pHYSICIANS, 4200 PINE STREET, PHIIA·
BV S. A. HAYASHI. JAPANESE ASSOClA1'JOt*"0F CRIMI· DELPHIA PA 19104. ANNALS OF INTERNALMEOICINE,
NOLOGY, TOKYO MEDICAL AND DENTAL yNlV, 1..cHOME, V 74, N 5 (MAY 1971), P 743·745, NCJ.1It3M
YUSHIMA, BUNKYQ.KU, TOKYO 113, JAPAN. ACTA OR/- CASE STUDIES ARE -PRESENTED OF THREE MEN WHO, .DESPITE
MINOLOGIAE ET MEDICINAE LEGALIS JAPANICA, 2D -v ~PLETElY NoNCRIMINAL PAstS, COMMITTED FELONIES
(1963), P 153·172. (In Efl{Jl/$h and J.,.,...)
NCH5310 AFTER DEVELOPING THYROTOXICOSIS, A CONDITION RELATED
10 HYPERTHYROIDISM.
THIS JAPANESE STUDY USING 15 PAIRS OF MONOZYGOTIC
TWINS EXAMINES CONCORDANCE AND DISCORDANCE FACTOFiS 3Oa. TRAIT AND .TVPE DfFFEREN(:E8 .A~ MALE·.
IN DEVIANCEj THAT IS, AT WHAT RATE AND WHY DO TWIN PART· FEMAU! ASSAI./LnVE AND NQNA88AULnVE, OfFIINP-
NERS VARIOUSLY RESIST OR SUCCUMB to JUVENILE ~UN· ERI., IV ",P. MCCREARV•. SOCIETYFOFt PERSONAL- ,.
QUENCY. ITY- ASSESSMENT; INC. JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY,AfJ.
·SESSMENT, V 40, NO (1976), P 61N121,,', NCJ.&7ft1
217. STUDY OF THE XYY SYNDROME IN TALL MEN -AND .JUVE- TRAlT'AND TYPE DIFFERENCES, AS DEFINED ~V THE MINN~SorA
NILE DEUNQUENTS, l!Iy M. J. MARIHlu.o. fl. A. BERK- MULTIPHASIC PERSONALITY INVENTORY (MMPI) SCALE SCORes'
SON, J, A. EDWARPB, and R. M. BANNERMAN., AMERI· AND PROFI~S, ARE INVES1IGI\TEPAMON(lMALE ANO.F.~~­
CAN MEDICAL, ASSOCIATION, 535 NORl'H- DlaAfU10RN
STREET, CHICAGO IL 60610. JOURNAL oF THEAMERI·
MISDEMEANOR ASSAULTIVE AND NONASSAULTIV.E OFFEN~RQi~' , .'
'l.'j
CAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, V 208,' N 2 (1D6D)i P
321.325. .HCH7111 304. muntENT -OF YOU,t4G DELf~,Em, . ~Vii wmt..
." Of;.
.' i PttIMVLHYDANTOIHIOPIIJM ,I\NQ.MtttliYPHIHID~"'"
THE INCIDENCE OF THE XYY KARYOTYPE IN POPtJIATIONS OF , . 1f,;C; I(. cotiHEftS" 8, l"'Af'ER.. G.... '~flttO" L.
MAI.E INMATES, PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS, CONTROLS (HOSPITAL . ICH'NAATZ, Md ,.. STONE., AMERICANMEOIOAL ~
EMPLOYEt:S), AND JUVENILE OFFENDERS IS REPORTED. •• 'CIATION, 53:; NORTHDEARI3ORN $TRt:ET; .CHICAOOIL

. '"
'. 25
" , . . ,. .' ,.; , ... ',
I

TWIN The EtiolOgy

60610. ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, V 24 AN ExPERIMENTAL PROGR/.M INTENDED TO IMPROVE .jAIL I


(FEBRUAR\',971), P 1~...160. NCJ.55011 MATES' NUTRITIONAL INTAKE AND TO REDUCE ANTISOCIAL
HAVIOR IS FORMULATED.
FORTY·THREE JUVENILE DELINQUENT MALES, RESIDING IN THE
MAF!YLANP TRAINING SCHOOL, WERE SELECTED FROM 52 NOMI· SponeorIng Agency: NEW JERSEY STATE LAW ENFORC
NAtED CASES AND TREATED WITH EITHER DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN PLANNING AGENCY, 3535 QUAKER BRIDGE ROAD, TRE
00025.
SODIUM, METHYLPHENIDATE, OR PLACEBO.
311. WAY THEY ATE WAS A CRIME. By B OQlTLIEil.
305. TWIN STUDIES, INHE~ITANCS AND CRIMINAUTY-A RODALE PRESS, INC, 33 EAST MINOR STR , EMMAUS
CRmCISM OF DALOARD AND KRIHOLEN. By R. A. PA 18049. PREVENTION, V 31, N 5 (MAY 1979), P
FORDE. STEVENS AND SONS, 11 NEW FETTER LANE, ~~. ~
LONDON, ENGLAND; INSTITUTE FOR. THe STUDY AND THIS ARTICLE DISCUSSES THE EFFECT OF IMPROPER DIET ON
TREATMENT OF DELINQUENCY, 34 SURREY STREET, CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AND DESCRIBES EFFORTS TO IMPROVE OF·
CROYDEN, SURREY CRO IRJ UK. BRmSH JOURNAL OF
FENDERS' MENTAL AND PHYSICAL HEALTH THROUGH NUTRmON
CRIMINOLOGY, V 18, N 1 (JANUARY 1978), P 71·74.
NCJ.5e612 IN OHIO, GEORGIA, COLORADO, AND WASHINGTON STATE.

THIS CRITICISM OF A 1976 NORWEGIAN TWIN STUDY ON HEREDI· 312. XXVY MALE PRESENTING WITH AOGRESSION-A CASE
TARY FACTORS IN CRIMINALITY ARGUES THAT THE AUTHORS REPORT. By R. BERNSTEIN, I. W. BERMAN, .net 0. T.
ERRONEOUSLY CONCLUDED THAT THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HERED- NURSE. MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA,
ITY IN REGISTERED CRIME IS NONEXISTENT. BOX 643, CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRIOA. SOUTH AFRICAN
MEDICAL JOURNAL, V 52, N 20 (NOVEMBER 5, 19m, P
809-812. NCJ.57007
301. TWO NEW CASES OF '/..VY CHROMOSOME COMPLE-
A CASE REPORT IS PRESENTED OF A 21·YEAFHlLO MALE RE·
MENT-AND A REVIEW OF THE UTERATURE. By S. F.
HOFFMAN. CANADIAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, 225 FERRED TO THE PSYCHIATRIC UNIT OF THE JOHANNESBURG
LISGAR STREET, SUITE 103, OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA. GENERAL HOSPITAL IN SOUTH AFRICA WHO WAS FOUND TO
CANADIAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, V 22, HAVS A 48,XXVV KARYOTYPE.
a
N (DECEMBER 1977), P 447-455. NCJ-56824
313. XVY AND XXY MEN-CRIMINAUYV AND AOQR~
TWO CASE HISTORIES OF XYV CHROMOSOME MALES ARE PRE· (FROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 11171,
SENTED AND COMPARED WITH 153 CASES DESCRIBED IN THE BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-
LITERATURE ON XYV CHROMOSOMES AND THEIR RELATION TO SEE NCJ.47285), By H. A. WITKIN, S. A.. MEDNiCK, F.
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR. SCHULSINOER, E. BAKKESTROM. K. O. CHRISTtANSEN, D.
R. GOODENOUGH, lind K. HIRSCHHORN. GARDNER
PRESS, INC, 19 UNION SQUARE WEST, NEW YORK NY
307. VISION ANALYSIS AND REFRACT1VE STATUS OF YOUTHS 10003. 23 p. 1977. NCJ.472rf1
IN A JUVENILE DETENTION HOME POPULATION. By S.
WONO. WILLIAMS AND WILKINS COMPANY, 429 EAST RESULTS OF A CASE·FINDING STUDY AMONG TALL MEN ARE
PRESTON STREET, BALTIMORE MD 21202. AMERICAN PRESENTED, ALONG WITH THE EVIDENCE:'OBTAINED FROM THE
JOURNAL OF OPTOMETRY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTIcs.
V 53, N 3 (MARCH 1916), P 112·119. NCJ.5113t3
SOCIAL RECORDS AVAILABLE FOR THE XYV AND xxv MEN WHO
WERE FOUND IN THE SAMPLING OF TALL MEN. I
MYOPIC, HYPEROPIC, ASTIGMATIC ERRORS, AND SPHERICAL SuppIenient8I Notu: REPRINTED FROM SCIENCE (1976), 193.
eQUIVALENT VALUES OF 633 DEt!NQUF.NTS WERE MEASUREP SponSOIfng Agency: NORTHEASTERN FAMILY INSTITUTE, INC, 15A
ALONG WITH MEDICAL PROBLEMS TO EXAMINE RELATIONSHIPS SEWALL STREET, MARBLEHEAD MA 01945•.
BETWEEN VISUAL AND MEDICAL FACTORS AND JUVENilE DELIN-
314. XYV CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITY, REPORT. US DE·
QUENCY. PARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE NA·
TIONAl INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, 5600 FISHERS
308. VISION AND TffE JUVENILE DELINQUENT. By D. DZlK. LANE, ROCKVILLE, MD 20852. 55 p. 1970.
AMERICAN OPTOMETRIC ASSOCIATION, 7000 CHEPPEWA NCJ.OO451
STREET, ST LOUIS MO 63119. JOURNAL OF THE AMERI· A CONFERENCE REPORT ON THE CURRENT
CAN OPTOMETRIC ASSOCIATION, V 37, N 5 (MAY 1006), STATE.QF·KNOWLEDGE OF THE CHROMOSOME ANOMOLY IND!·
P 461-468. NCJ.54020
CATES HIGH PREVALENCE RATES FOR 'PENAL AND MENTAL IN·
A RELATIOr~SHIP BE'TWEEN VISION PROBLEMS AND JUVENILE DE· STITUTION INMATES.
L1NQUENCY IS DESCRIBED USING A TENNESSEE STUDY OF JUVE· .AYllII8bII1ty: GPO,
NILE DELINQUENTS AND SCHOOL ENROLLMENT; FOUR PERCEp·
TUAl SKILLS IMPORTANT TO READING ARE DISCUSSED. 315. XVY CHROMOSOME GENETICS. By ft. C. BAUMILLER.
JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES, V 14, N .. (OCTO-
sot. VISUAL EVOKED RESPONSE AND FREQUENCY DENSITY BER 1969) P 411-418. NCJ.07043
SPECTA" OF PRISONER·PATIENTS. By D. s. DOBBS ILLUSTRATED REPORT ON THE POSSIBLE RELATIONSHIPS BE-
and L S. SPECK. GRUNE AND STRATTON, INC; TWEEN THE XYV CHROMOSONAL ANOMALY AND VIOLENT BE·
AMERICAN PSYCHOPATHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 111 HAVIOR.
FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK NY 10017. COMPREHENSIVE
Availability: NCJRS MICROFICHE PROGRAM.
PSYCHIATRY, V 9, N 1 (JANUARY 1968), P 62·10.
NCJ·571.G
318. XlV CHROMOSOME MALE-oR SYNDROME? (FROM MEDi-
NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN 14 MALE SOCIO- CAL GENETICS, V 10, 1i74, BY ARTHUR G STEINBERG
PATHIO INMATES OF A MAXIMUM·SECURITY PSYCHIATRIC FAOILl· AND ALEXANDER 0 BEARN). By D. S. BORGAH'<AR and
TY AND 14 AGE·MATOHED CONTROLS ARE EXPLORE!). S. A. SHAH. GRUNE AND STRATTON, INC. 89 p.
1974. NCJ-65t4f
310. VITAMIM DIET PROGfiAM FEASIBILITY STUDY. By a. THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF: EVIDENCE LINKING XYV
D'ASAnD. MORRIS COUNTY OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF, CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENTS WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR, A
COUNTY COURTHOUSE, MORRISTOWN NJ 07960. 20 p. REVIEW OF STUDY FINDINGS TO 1974, AND A DISCUSSION OF
1973. HCJ·1304& SOCIAL AND LEGAL IMPLICATIONS ARE PRESENTED.

26
of ·Crlmlnallty XYV

117. XYY KARYOTYPE AND CRIIIINALITY-A REVIEW. By S. THIS ARTICLE REPORTS THE LACK OF A CAUSAL LINI< BETWEEN
KESSLER and R. H. uoos. PERGAMON PRESS \.TO. . THE PRESENCE OF AN EXTRA Y CHROMOSOME. AND VIOLENT
HEADINGTON HILL HAU., OXFORD 0)(3 oaW. ENGLAND. BEHAVIOR. METHODOLOGY USED IN SUCH STUDIES ARE SAID TO
JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, V 7 (1970). P CONTAIN FLAWS.
153-170. NCJ MI47
THIS PAPER REVIEWS THE EVIDENCE REGARDING THE XYY SVN·
S22. XYY SVNDROME-A GENETIC DETERMINANT OF BEHAV·
DROME TO ASCERTAIN THE EXTENT TO WHICH XYV'S DIFFER lOR. By J. P. WELCH. MARCH OF DIMES-NATIONAL
FROM 46.XY MALES AND FOCUSES ON ISSUES STEMMING FROM FOUNDATION. BOX 1275. WHITE PLAINS NY 10605.
RESULTS AND IDEAS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH. BIRTH DEFECTS-ORIGINAL ARTICLE SERIES, V 5. N 5
(MAY 1969). P 10-15. NCJ·57067
3111. XVY OFFENDER-A MODERN MYTH. By R. G. FOX. EXISTING INFORMATION REGARDING THE XYV SYNDROME IS
WILLIAMS AND WILKINS COMPANY. 428 EAST PRESTON BRIEFLY REVIEWED, WITH ATTENTION TO EVIDENCE SUGGEST·
STREET. BALTIMORE MD 21202. JOURNAL OFCRIMINAL ING THAT AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IS NOT NECESSARILY A
LAW, CRIMINOLOGY AND POL'C~ SCIENCE, V 62, N 1
(MARCH 1971). P 59·73. NCJoCI53t1 PROMINENT FEATURE OF THIS CONDITION.
A REVIEW OF RESEARCH ON THE XYV SYNDROME SHOWS THAT 323. XVY-SYNDROME-CUNICAL AND BEHAVIORAL TYPOL·
INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE TO INSTITUTE FAR OGY. By T. PlflOZVNSKl, G. SCRIPCARU, A. HARMANS-
REACHING LEGISLATIVE AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION. CHI, and F. TEODORESCY. PUBLICATIONS ACTA
MEDIC~' BELGICA. HOTEL DE SOCIETES SCIENTIFIQUES.
319. XVY SURVEY IN AN INSTiTUTION FOR SEX OFFENDERS RUE DI:S CHAMP5-ELYSEES 43. 8·1050 BRUSSELS. BEL·
AND THE MENTALLY ILL. By J. MELNYK. A. DERENC- GlUM. ACTA PSYCHIATRICA 8ELGICA, V 77, N 2 (1977).
SENYI, F. VANASEK, A. J. RUCCI, and H. THOMPSON. P 197·215. NCJ·57210
MACMILLIAN JOURNALS LTD. 4 LITTLE ESSEX STREET. FOUR PERSONS SUSPECTED OF HAVING XVY CHROMOSOMES
LONDON WC2R 3LF. ENGLAND. NA TURE, V 224 (0C- ARE EXAMINED CLINICALLY AND BEHAVIORALLY FOR ABNORMAL
TOBER 1969). P 369-370. NCJ-57013
CHROMOSOMES AND FOR CHARACTERISTICS ASSOCIATED WITH
THIS ARTICLE REPORTS A SURVEY OF 200 TALL ANTISOCIAL MEN XVY'S.
IN A CALIFORNIA STATE HOSPITAL INDICATING THAT THE INCl·
DENCE OF THE 47.XYV TRAIT IS HIGHER IN MENTALLY DISOR· 324. XVY SYNDROME IN YOUNG GREEK DETAINEES. By N.
DERED SEX OFFENDERS THAN IN THE CRIMINALLY INSANE. MATSANIOTIS. C. TSENGHI. C. ECONOMOU-MAVROU. and
P. IlIILAUS. SCHWABE AND COMPANY. STEINENTROS·
320. XYY SYNDROME. By D. R. PITCHER. HEADLEY BROS TRASSE 13. 4010 BASEL, SWITZERLAND. HELVETICA
LTD. ASHFORD. KENT TN24 8HH. ENGLAND. BRmSH PAEDIATRICA ACTA. V 25. FASC 3 (JULY 1970). P
JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, SPECIAL PUBLICATION N 9 253·257. NCJ·seS97
(1975), P 316-325. NCJ.H154 A CHROMOSOME SCRE£:NING OF 139 MALE INMATES AND 31
STUDIES LINKING 47.XVY SEX CHROMOSOME CONSTITUTIONS MENTALLY ILL MALE OFFENDERS IN GREECE IS REPORTED.
WITH AGGRESSIVE AND DEVIANT BEHAVIOR ARE REVIEWED
CONCERNING THE INCIDENCE AND PREVALENCE OF XYY'S AND
THEIR SHARED CHARACTERISTICS.

321. XVY SYNDROME-A DANGEROUS MYTH. By J. BECK·


WITH and J. KING. NEW SCIENTIST. KING'S REACH
TOWER. STAMFORD STREET. LONDON SE1 9LS. ENG·
LAND. NEW SCIENTIST, V 64. N 923 (NOVEMBER 14.
1974). P 474-476. NCJ:-571\47

27
-----~-----.--------------------------~------------~

Subject Index

CORRECTIONS ,1,
16.28•• 84.102.103. ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
A 107,108.110.146,162.241,310.314.318 4,10,19,30,48.89,81.105.110,117,118,
119,120,121,126.153,154,162,170,221.
COUNSELING 111.311 232,265
AGGRESSION 4,5,6,20,29,33,50.81. COURTS 162
82.86.100.124.127. 138. 161. i67. 168. EMOTIONAL DISORDERS 17,112.292
169,179.182.184,200,207.211.228.246. CRIME PATTERNS 63 EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED DELINQUENTS
249,266,271,28~312,320,322 .CRIME PREDICTION 34.91.242,243,244 112
ALCOHOL ABUSE 250 CRIME PREVENTION MEASURES 91.129, ENCEPHALOGRAPHIC RESEARCH 48,
ALCOHOLISM 62. 138, 172, 222, 229 162 69,70,167,252,253,262,295,309
ALCOHOLISM CAUSES 35.51,115.172, CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 42. 66 ENGLAND 13,99,132,133,149,267,270,
290 C:RIMINALISTICS 162 216,271,298
ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT 265 CRIMINALITY PREDICTION 127.170,172. EPILEPTIC DISORDERS 19,73,97,131,
214. 232, 321 132,133,134,135.237,218
ARSON 127.238 EVALUATION MEASURES 90,139.247,
AUDIOVISUAL AIDS 27, 62. 222, 223, 227,
CRIMINOLOGY 25. 26. 34. 37, 38, .39. 59.
60.63,66.77.78.80.103.129.144,162. 273
274 165.206.314 EX'()FfENDER EMPLO'lMENT 110
CULTURAL INFLUENCES 5.53.95,157,
179,225,248,265
B F
BEHAVIOR 80.129
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION 35, 59. 60, 64,
D FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY
146,203
72,
104,124,272 DATA COLLECTION DEVICES 81,82 FEMALE JUVENILE DELINQUENTS 11,
BEHAVIOR PATTERNS 15,60,163,253, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO 89.181
262,270.294 1~ • FEMALE OFFENDERS 11, 69, 225, 245,
BEHAVIOR TYPOLOGIES 26.49, 102, 104. DEMOGRAPHY 128 'a03
163,253,262 FEMALE STATUS OFFENDERS 232
BEHAVIOR UNDER STRESS 16,228,294 DENMARK 40.74.76,128.142.112,173.
193.234,235,236.238.242.243,244.275, FILMS 27, 274
BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 283,313 FINLAND 123,293
12.59.63.77.80.110,114,144.179.218, DEVIANCE 15,19.33.38,51.52,57.61, FOLLOWUP CONTACTS 146,245
315,318 11,75.88,89,101.104,145,149,152,155,
BIBLIOGRAPHIES 19. 143,251, 276 164,168.172,175.183,164,193,211,213, FRANCE 54,55,149,154
BLOOD AND BODY FLUID ANALYSIS 6, 239,240,244,254,270,283,285,287,288,
28,184,202,230 298,302,316,323
DIAGNOSTIC AND RECEPTION
PROCESSING 102,107
G
DOMESTIC RELATIONS 39,74 GENETIC INFLUENCES 15,22,25,26,51,
c DRUG ABUSE 250, 276, 300
CRUG ABUSE CAUSES 51
56,66,88,91,128,155,156,157,159,160,
;~5, 172, 180, 198,225,250,254,263,290
GLUCOSE DISTURBANCES 19.36,108,
CANADA 35,37,38,39.43,144,149.197. DRUG DEPENDENCE 62, 138, 222, 300 162,240
214 DRUG DETOXIFICATION 311 GRI;AT BRITAIN 47,48,68,237
CAUSE REMOVAL CRIME PREVENTION DRUG EFFECTS 14, 104,210 GREECE 324
115 DRUG RESEARCH 29,81,104,112,124,
CHILD AIIUSE 199 304
CHIl.D DEVELOPMENT
CHILD MOLESTERS 229
199, DRUG TREATMliNT 210,264 H
DRUG USE 124
CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES 7, 9. HOLISTIC THERAPY 269, 292, 311
12,19,24,32,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47, HOME ENVI~ONMENT 63,74,79,'91,96,
6G,68,89, 71. 72, 75. 76.86,8~ 103, 143, E 98,128,142,157,243,254
147,148,149,160,161,156,168,161,162,
'.1~1~1~1~'.'.1K1~ HOMICIDE 45,69,135,166
202, 205, 235, 236, 238, 239; 248, 283. 275, ECOLOGICAL INFLUENCES 53, 64. 84, HORMONE STUDIES 8, 14, 36. 167, 200;
280,281,282,283,284,285,286,267.297, 85,115,129.130,138,142,166,169,179, 229,271,302
298,301,306,312,313,314,316,316,317, 233,250,294 HUMAN fACTORS ENGINEERING 207,
318,319,320,321,322,323,324 EDUCATIONAL LEVELS 277 321
CIVtLDleoRDER8 84 EDUCATIONALLY DISADVANTAGED HUMAN RESEARCH SUBJECT PROTECTION
COW:01lVI!! V/oUINCE 95 PERSONS 190,192 86,207,321
•COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 23,54,55,75, ELECTRODERMAL RESpoNSE 8,25,125, HYPERACTIVE CHILDREN. 30,170,231,
84,151,154,260,263 244,257,269,260,288,299 252,264,269,293

29
i'
,
'>'\
.
INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR Subject· 'Index

256, 258, 259.265,276,278,2V2,284,306, PUBLISHED PROCEEDINGS 37. 38, 39,


I 309, 315, 319, 324 159
MENTALLY RETARDED OFFENDERS 68,
INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR 136,143,218 89,161,aG3,275,281,282,283
INMATE CLASSIFICATION
INMATE PROGRAMS
221
102,311
MINORITIES 93, 94
MURliER 48,120,126
R
INMATES 104,230,266 RAPE 229
INMATES AS RESEARCH SUBJECTS 14, RAPISTS 229
61,246,295,304 N RECIDIVISM 111.120,187,214,
INSANITY DEFENSE 65, 314 RECIDIVISTS 29, 245
INTELLIGENCE (IOJ) 99,142,174, 177, NEUROLOGICAL DEFECTS 100
181,275 NEURCLOGICAl DISORDERS 22, 29, 31, REHABILITATION 16,102,311
ITALY 78 37,83,96,93,94,102,123,162,167,204, REMEDIAL EDUCATION 101,114,176,
207,208,211,212,213,214,215,217,218. 185,187,190,268,274
221,295 REPUBLIC OF INDIA 32,181
NOIIWAY 219
J NUTRITION AND DIET' 33,61,62,108,
REPUBI.IC OF IRELAND
REPUBLIC OF KOREA
88
130
109,111.115,116,223,224,227,269,289,
JAILS 28,108,109,162,310 310,311 REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA 312
JAPAN 67,79,151,296 RESEARCH METHODS 29,49,81,62,125,
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY 13,27 38,91, 156,191,214,215,246,252,263,305
102,107,113,114,153,171,185, °195, 196,
268,277,294,308
o RESEARCH PROGRAMS 72, 230, 268
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY FACTORS 1, 3,
11,13,17,23,27,32,39,51,67,79,87,90,
92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,
105,107,113,117,118,120,121, 122, 127,
OFFENDER CLASSlFICATION
137.165,278,315
OFFENDER STATISTICS 72
16,29,103,
s
139, 140, 150, 155, 170, 171, 173, 174, 176, OFFENDERS 72. 128,152.165,175,241, SCOTLAND 9, 149, 282
177,178.181,185,186. 187. 188. 189. 190, 265,322 SEX OFFENSES 72, 276
191,192,195,196,196,199,206,208,217, OFFENSES 233
231,232,247,264,267,268,270,273,274, SEIWAL BEHAVIOR 11,209,287
277,289,291,292,294,297,298,307,308, OVERCROWDING 51,84,85
SHOPLIFTING 70
324 SINGAPORE 281
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY PREVENTION
58,95,102,107,113,127,140,178,186,
p SOCIAL CONDmONS
234,250
24,51,91,219,
187,195,196,268
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS 1,23,27,54, PAROLE 110 SOCIALIZATION 25,95,179,252
55,69,92,93,102,106,107, 113, 146, 150, PATUXENT INSTITUTION 213 , SOCIOLOGY 63, 80, 179
154,155,174,177,187,217,232,270,280, PERSONALITY 28,59,104, 144,225,230. SOCIOPATHS 14,18,104,156,157,210,
289,296,304 275,298 284,272,300,309
JUVENILE OFfENDERS 6,27,146,150, PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT 9, 49, 174, STATE OF ISRAEL 69,105,118
177, 268, 293 205,216,236,263,271,303
JUVENILES 10,13,30,40,55,114,154, STATE-OF-THE-ART REVIEWS 159,195,
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS 7, 32, 34, 196,318
171,174,196,220,277,294,308 54,57,77,91,150,163,164,202,239 STAnSTICAL ANALYSIS 23,54,55,154,
• PHYSICALLY HANDICAPPED 55,122, 273
217,307
L POLISH PEOPLES REPUBLIC 23
STAnSTICS 54,55, 130, 151, 154
STUDIES OF ADOPTED CHILDREN 5, 1S6
PREDICTION 88,127,214
LAW~ AND STATUTES 89 SUICUJE 169
PRENATAL BIOLOGICAL INFLUENCES 5,
LEARNING DISABILITIES 1,3,13,'27,37, 11,39,43,46,52,57,67,71,79,83,88, SUPERVISED LIBERTY 201
58,83,90,93,94,101,102,106,107,113, 147, 149, 150, 158, 161, 164, 175, 190, 193, SURVEYS 70,132,194,197,276,282,285,
114, 122, 139, 140, 174, 176, 185, 186, 187, 198.239,286,303,305,306,317,320,323 298
188,189,190,191,192,195,196,204,208, PRESENTENCE INVESTIGATIONS 65
217,247,267,268,273,274,277,291,293, SWEDEN 194, 290
308 PROBATION CONDITIONS 201 SYPtjPOSIA 207
PROBATIONERS 111
PROBLEM BEHAVIOR 10,15,30,36,38,
M 60.83,99,124,127,170,171,172,204,
205,209,212,221,236,237',254,266,'-288, T
271,280,286,300.312
MALE JUVEWLE DEUNQUENTS 95 TECHNIQUES 29,137,278
PROGRAMS 13,122
MALE OFFENDERS 6,7,9,40,65,110, fJROPERTV CRIMES 85 TESTIMONY 37, 36, 39
194,197,202,270,2Bn,282,2S4,297,303,
318,319,321 PSYCHIATRY 76,153,292,319 TESTING AND MEASUREMENT 54, 90, 93,
PSYCHOLOGICAL EVALUATION 6, 7, 17, 106,110,113,114,153,154,174,247,273
MATHEMATICAL MODELS 157,162
40,55,70,116,117,153,165,178,194, THAILAND 87
MEDICAL EVALUATION 200 208,214,216,221,245,248,272
MEDICAL RESEARCH 86,119,131,155, THEORY 26,64,66,77,80, 103, 129, 137,
187, 1S2,207~226,246,266,285,295,301 PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 86,126, 162,195,196,241,276
137,167,170,207,215,220,246,261,272, TOXIC REACTIONS 210, 311
MEDICOLEGAL CONSIDERATIONS 66, 295
100,131,266,314,321 PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES 179,250, TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS 169, 233
MENTAL DEFECTIVES 69, 211, 241, 286 272 TREATMENT 16,35,41,69,102,104,115,
MENTAL DISORDERS 17, 37, 50, 53, 61, PSYCHOLOGY 15,59,60,110,144,155, 138,141,185,200,201,224,249,250,252
73,83,98,97,100,105,116,117,116,121, 218 TWINS AS RESEARCH SUBJECTS 6, 24,
133,135,136,152,160,169,198,20Q,203, PSYCHOPATHS 2,8,9, 15, 17,49,51,55, 67,69,79,156,161,165,172,219,234,
211,213,221,251,283,292,297 70,76,96,116,125,126,141,156,170, 279,296,305
MENTAL HEALTH 131 200,215,220,225,228,238,245,250,251,
252,253,255,256,258,259,260,261,262,
MENTALLY HANDICAPPED
MENTALLY ILL. OFFENDERS
lM,293
2,9,15,17,
44,47,53,65,68,70,72,100,116,145,
263,265,287,299
PSYCHOTHERAPY 201,266
u
194,202,203,210,213,224,228,235,238, PUBLIC AlTITUDES 241 URBAN AREA STUDIES 85

30
SUbject Index YOun~FUL OFFENDERS

v
VICTIMIZATION 63
VICTIMOLOGY 63
VIOLENCE 4,5,6,17,20,21,22,75,88,
136,141,145,147,167,168,169,179,203
212,216,220,226,227,229,249,251,254,
276,280,289,303
VIOLENT CRIMES 21, 45, 73, 203, 228,
230,276
VIOLENT INMATES 6,216
VIOLENT OFFENDERS 21,29,81,82,137,
146,203.212,216,228,278
VISUAL ACUITY 1,13,122,307,308

w
WALES 73
WORKSHOPS AND SEMINARS 62, 222,
223,227

y
YOUNG ADULT OFFENDERS 6
YOUTHFUL OFFENDERS 27,99,110,177

31

"',. ,',"
j.
Author Index

BANNERMAN, R. M.
A B STUDY OF THE XYV SYNDROME IN TALL
MEN AND JUVENILE DELINQUENTS
ABRAMOWICZ, T. BACHARA, O. H. NCJ·57136 217
PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL IN· INTERVENTION WITH JUVENILE DELIN· BANPOTKASEM,S.
VESTIGATION OF XYV PRISONERS QUENTS (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMI· CYTOGENETIC STUDY IN SEVERE JUVE·
NCJ·56891 241 CAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT OF NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·56896
DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1978, 87
ADRAMOWlTl, S. I. BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN SEE NCJ· BARCAI,A.
FROM PHRENOLOGY TO PSYCHOSUR· 50444) NCJ·50458 178 PRECURSOR OF DELINQUENCY - THE
GERY AND BACK AGAIN BIOLOG!CAL LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE HYPERKINETIC DISORDER OF CHIlD-
STUDIES OF CRIMINALITY NCJ-45919 DELINQUENCY NCJ·503S6 187 HOOD Nr,J·56955 231
152 BI'CH-Y-RITA, O. BARCHAS, J. D.
AaARWAL, S. S. EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-A STUDY OF GENETICS OF HUMAN AGGRESSION
BUCCAL SMEAR AND DERMATOGLYPHIC 130 VIOLENT PATIENTS NCJ·55215 NCJ·56949 1.1
STUDIES IN .IUVENILE DELINQUENCY 138 BARCIK, J. D.
NCJ·57143 32 BAKER,D. NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST
AKE880N, H. O. CHROMOSOME ERRORS IN MEN WITH AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYCHOPATHOl·
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR COMPARISON OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION. 1977,
LENGTH OF THE Y·CHROMOSOMES IN OF SELECTED MEN WITH KLINE· BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET Al) NCJ·
MEN (EXAMINED BY FORENSIC PSYCHI· FELTER'S SYNDROME AND XYY CHRO· 57188 211
ATRISTS NCJ·57165 184 MOSOME PATIERN NCJ·54106 NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS
ALLEN, H. E. WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·
BIO-SOCIAL CORRELATES OF TWO BAKKESTROM, e. 39871 213
TYPES OF ANTI·SOCIAL SOCIOPATHS CRIM!NALITY IN XYV AND XXY MEN BARON,J.
NqJ·56963 14 NCJ-36253 75 CRIME, MAL~UTRITION AND. THE ORTHO-
DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF XYV AND XXY MEN-CRIMINALITY AND MOLECULAR APPROACH PANEL DIS-
SOCIOPATHY BY MEANS OF DRUGS- AGGRESSION (FROM BlOSOCIAL CUSSION WITH A!.lDIENCE PARTICIPA·
A SUMMARY REPORT NCJ·19432 BASES OF CRIMiNAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, TION (CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE
104 BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH CON·
ALPERN, S.
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ-47285) FERENCE) NCJ-40033 .2
NCJ-47291 313 BARR,~.L.
DEVELOPMENTAL ANALYSIS OF EEG BALIS,O. TEsr OF A THEORY OF DELINQUENCY-
(ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) ABNOR· NEtiROlOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDMST 'DELINQUENT' BEHAVIORS AMONG IN·
MALITIES IN JUVENILE DELINQUENTS AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYCHOPAiHOL· STITUTIONALIZED DRUG ADDICTS AS A
NCJ·56741 105 OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, 1977, FUI~CTIO'~ OF AROUSAL AND THE SEN·
BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET AL) N.CJ· SATION·SEEKING MOTIVE NCJ·66160
AMIR,M.
CHROMOSOMAL DEVIATION AND CRIME
57168 211 aoo
BALIS, O. U. BARROWS, T. S.
(FROM AND JUSTICE, 1970·1971, 1972, CRITERION OF BRAIN INSTABILITY -EEG PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL DIAGNOSnC
BY J SUSMAN-SEE NCJ·27315) NCJ· (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) ACTIVA· SERVICES FOR LEARNING DISABLED
27921 42 TIO~~ (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN YOUTHS-RESEARCH PROCEDURES
ASAKA,A. AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 1978, BY NCJ-46418 247
FREQUENCIES OF INDIVIDUALS WITH RUSSELL R MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119) BARTHOLOMEW, A. "-
EXCESS SEX·CHROMOSOMES AMONG NCJ·53124 81 CHROMOSOME SURVEY OF PERSONS
MENTALLY RET,6RDED, MENTALLY ILL, EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-DEFINITIONS, CHARGED WITH MURDER NCJ·l4408
DELINQUENT, AND CRIMINAL POPULA· DESCRIPTIONS, AND MEASUREMENT 45
TIONS NCJ·38012 151 (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN AG· BARTLETT, D. J.
GRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 1976, BY RUS· CHROMOSOMES OF MALE PATIENTS IN A
ASSAEL, M. SELL R MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119) SECURITY PRISON NCJ·57083
DEVELOPMENTAL ANALYSIS OF EEG NCJ·53120 137 47
(ELECTI~OENCEPHALOGRAM) ABNOR· NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS BA8U,G.K.
MALITIES IN JUVENilE DELINQUENTS WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· RELATION OF PSYCHOl.OGIC MEAtURES
NCJ.567il 105 39871 213 OF AGGRESSION AND HOSTILITY TO
EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND BALLA, D. TESTOSTERONE PRCIDUCTION IN MAN
RORSCHACH FINDINGS IN A GROUP OF DELINQUENCY, PARENTAL POYCHO· NCJ·56289 271
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS SUSPECT OF PATHOLOGY, AND PARENTAL CRIMI· BATES,M.
ORGANIC BRAIN DISORDER NCJ· NALITY -CLINICAL AND EPIDEMIOLOG· SURVEY OF Y CHROMOSOME VARIANTS
56739 11' ICAl FINDINGS NCJ·56887 oe AND PERSONALITY IN 436 BOASTAL

33
.i
I
....
~-, ---- ,----~-..--------~-.- .. ------ ---

BAUMIIU.ER, R. C. Author Index

LADS AND 254 CONTROLS NCJ.S6244 MINORS, PART 2-FRANCE (In French) BREGGIN. P. R.
2H NCJ·30279 / 64 PSYCHOSURGERY FOR THE CONTR
BAUMILI.:ER. R. C. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE PSYCHO· OF VIOLENCE-A CRITICAL REV
XYY CHROMOSOME GENETICS NCJ· MOTOR FUNCTION OF MINORS AT AN (FROM NEURAL BASES OF VIO CE
07043 315 OBSERVATION CENTER AND OF VAR· AND AGGRESSION, 1975, .BY S
BEADLE.E. 10US GROUPS OF NONDELINQUENTS- FIELDS AND W H SWEET - NCJ·
LACK OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN DE· FRANCE (In French) NCJ·30255 57520) NCJ·57526 28fJ
FEc,rIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY 55 BRODER, P. K.
OF HERPESVIRUS HOMINIS NCJ· BLACKBURN. R. ESTABLISHING AN OPERA NAL DEFINI·
57105 114 AGGRESSION AND THE EEG (ELECTRO· TION OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
BECKMANN. J. ENCEPHALOGRAM)-A QUANTITATIVE NCJ·46419 139
t REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR· ANALYSIS NCJ·57498 4 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SELF·REPORT·
MAUTIES IN MENTALLY RETARDED BLANCHARD. J. B. ED JUVENILE DF.LINQUENCY AND
MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY· ACADEMIC, PERCEPTUAL, AND VISUAL LEARNING DISABILITIES-A PRELlMI·
CHOLOGICAL STUDY OF PATIENTS LEVELS OF DETAINED' JUVENILES NAllY LOOK AT THE DATA NCJ46417
WIVH XYY AND XXYV KARYOTYPES (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMICAL AP· 273
NCJ·56389 275 PROACHES TO TREATMENT OF DELIN· SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE LINK BE·
BECKWITH. J. QUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1978, BY TWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES AND
XYY fIYNDROME-A DANGEROUS MYTH LEONARD J HIPPCHEN-SEE NCJ· JUVENILE DELINQUENCY NCJ·50951
NCJ·57447 321 50444) NCJ·50457 1 291
BELL, El. BLOMGREN. P. G. BROW, W. M. C.
GENE:TICS, ENVIRONMENT AND PSYCHO- COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PREDICTIVE GENETICS AND CRIME NCJ·57495
PATHOLOGY NCJ47446 180 CRITERIA IN THE PREDISPOSITION OF 158
HOMICIDAL ADOLESCENTS NCJ· BROWN. W. M. C.
BranClM/tN. M. 57166 53
MMPI (MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PER· SEX CHROMOSOME ANEUPLOIDY AND
SONALITY INVENTORY) PROFILES OF BOEKER. W. CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·57018
MALES WITH ABNORMAL SEX CHRO· MENTALLY DISORDERED VIOLENT OF·
FENDERS NCJ·57140 203 284
MOSOME COMPLEMENTS NCJ·56297 BURGESS, P. K.
205 BOHMAN.M.
SOME GENETIC ASPECTS OF ALCOHOL· EYSENCK'S THEORY OF CRIMINALITY-A
Bf!RKSON. R. A. ISM AND CRIMINALITY NCJ·52320 NEW APPROACH • NCJ·04538 144
STUDY OF THE XYV SYNDROME IN TALL BYLINSKY. G.
MEN AND JUVENILE DELINQUENTS 2H
BOHNERT. P. J. NEW CLUES TO THE CAUSES OF VIO-
NCJ·57136 207 PREDICTION OF EEG (ELECTROENCEPH· LENCE NCJ·07916 2111
DERMAN. A. ALOGRAM) ABNORMALITIES IN ADO·
ADAPTIVE AND LEARNING SKILLS ItJ JU·
VENILE DELINQUENTS-A NEUROPSY·
CHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS NCJ·55811
LESCENT DELINQUENTS NCJ·58772

BONN,J.
232 c·
3 CRIMINALITY AND VIOLENCE IN EPILEp· CADORET. R. J.
INCIDENCE OF LEARNING DISABILITIES TIC PRISONERS NCJ·57070 73
IN JUVENILE DELINQUENTS AND NON· PSYCHOPATHOLOGY IN ADOPTED-AWAY
BONNET. P. L. OFFSPRING OF BIOLOGIC PARENTS
DELINQUENTS-IMPLICATIONS FOR BIOCHEMICAL DIAGNOSIS FOR DELlN·
ETIOLOGY AND TREATMENT NCJ· WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NC',J·
QUENT BEHAVIOR (FROM ECOLOGIC- 56423 264
46748 174 BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO
LEARNING DISABILITIES IN JUVENILE DE· CAMPBELL
TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND LEARNING DISABILITY -DEFINITIONS
LINQUENTS I'lCJ·56981 1199 CRIMINALS, 1978, BY LEONARD J HIPP·
BERMAN. I. W. AND PROCEDURES NCJ·47979
CHEN SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ·50453 191
XXYY MALE PRESENTING WITH AGGRES- 17
SION-A CASE REPORT NCJ·57007 CAMPBELL. P. B.
BOON,W.H. DEFINITION AND PREVALENCE OF
312 SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES
BERMAN. Y. LEARNING DISABILITIES NCJ-46416
AND CRIME NCJ·58895 281 110
CHROMOSI'MAL DEVIATION AND CRIME BOOTH,A.
(FROM AND JUSTICE, 1970·1971, 1972, PSYCHOEOUCATIONAL DIAGNOSTIC
CROWDING AND CIVIL DISORDER-AN SERVICES FOR LEARNING DISABLED
BY J SUSMAN-SEE NCJ·27315) NCJ· EXAMINATION OF COMPARATIVE NA·
21321 42 YOUTHS-RESEARCH PROCEDURES
TIONAL AND CITY DATA NCJ·3771 0 NCJ46418 247
fJEHNSlEIN. R. 84
XXVY MALE PRESENTING WITH AGGRES- CROWDING AND URBAN CRIME RATF.S CANTWELL. D. P.
SION-A CASE REPORT NCJ·57007 NCJ·36037 l5 PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY IN THE PRE·
312 BORGANKAR, D. S. VENTION OF ANTISOCIAL AND DELIN·
II!IBACE, R. M. A. XYY CHROMOSOME MALE.QR SYN· QUENT BEHAVIOR NCJ·67137
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF DROME? (FROM MEDICAL GENETICS, V 2114
NORMAL BOYS, PELINQUENT BOYS, 10, 1974, BY ARTHUR G STEINBERG CERVENKA. J.
AND BOYS WITH LEARNING PROBLEMS AND ALEXANDER G BEARN) NCJ· SEARCH FOR XYY SYNDROME IN PSY·
NCJ·56593 217 55848 316 CHIATRICALLY DISTURBED CHILDREN
BILALl8. P. BORGAONKAR. D. S. AND ADOLESCENT JUVENILE DELlN·
XYY SYNDROME IN YOUNG GREEK DE· FORTY·SEVEN, XYV SYNDROME, HEIGHT QUENTS-A PRELIMINARY REPORT
TAINEES NCJ·58897 324 AND INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF JUVE· NCJ·56391 280
BISHOP, D. V. M. NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·57016 CHAIKLlN, H.
COMMENT ON 'REGISTERED CRIMINAL· 150 DELINQUENCY AND HEALTH STATUS
ITY' IN FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN AT I?.QRKOVEC, T. D. NCJ·51248 92
HIGH RISK FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA' BY AUTONOMIO REACTIVITY TO SENSORY CHANG. D. H.
KIRKEGMRD-SORENSEN AND MED· STIMULATION IN PSYCHOPATHIC, NEU· ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON CRIMI.
NICK NCJ·57145 52 ROTIC, AND NORMAL JUVENILE DeLlN· NAL ACTIVITY IN KOREA NCJ-07635
BIZE, P. R. QUENTS NCJ·54505 8 130
COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SEN~1ITIVITY BRAND,e.n. CHAUCHARD, P.
TO TOUCH, WEIGHT AND PAIN AMONG CHROMOSOMES OF MALE PATIENTS IN A CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS. BIO-
OBSERVATION CENTER MINORS AND SECURITY PRISON NCJ·57083 CHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN, AND CRIMI·
VARIOUS GROUPS OF NOAMAL 47 NALITY (In French) NCJ·39375 41

34
-----~------- ------------------------
Author Index DElRE, T.

CHESLEY, F. D. FEMALE CRIMINALS NCJ·57139 CRADDICK, R.


DELINQUENCY AND HEALTH STATUS 245 ATIEMPT TO IDENTIFY PRISONERS WITH
NCJ·51248 92 COATES, T. AN' XYY CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT
CHESTER, B. SURVEY OF Y CHROMOSOME VARIANTS BY PSYCHIATRIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL
PERSONALITY AND LIFE HISTORY OF AND PERSONALITY IN 436· BORSTAL MEANS NCJ·57104 7
FEMALE OFFENDERS AND THEIR LADS AND 254 CONTROLS NCJ·38244 CRAIGEN,D.
SIBS-A TAXONOMIC AND GENETIC 298 PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL AC-
ANALYSIS NCJ·56950 225 COHEN,A. TIVITY IN A MIXED-MOTIVE GAME SITU·
CHIROL, Y. TEST OF A THEORY OF DELINQUENCY- ATION NCJ-56510 258
FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES OF THE ELEC- 'DELINQUENT' BEHAVIORS AMONG IN· CRITCHLEV, E. M. R.
TROENCEPHALOGRAM AMONG STITUTIONALIZED DRUG ADDICTS AS A READING RETARDATION, DYSLEXIA AND
NORMAL, PSYCHONEUROTIC OR DE· FUNCTION OF AROUSAL AND THE SEN· DELINQUENCY NCJ·5700B 267
LINQUENT ADOLESCENTS AN ATIEMPT SATION·SEEKING MOTIVE NCJ·58150 CROFTON, T. A.
AT DIFFERENTIAL CLASSIFICATION BY 300 FORTY·SEVEN, XYY SYNDROME, HEIGHT
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS-FRANCE (In COLEMAN, L S. AND INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF JUVE·
French) NCJ·30265 154 PERSPECTIVES ON THE MEDICAL RE· NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·57016
CHRISTENSEN, K. R. SEARCH OF VIOLENCE NCJ·56388 150
CHIL 'JHOOD OF MALES WITH THE XYY 22B
S'~~DROME NCJ·57144 40 COLLUM,J.
CHRISTIANSEN, K. O.
BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAV·
ATIEMPT TO IDENTIFY PRISONERS WITH
AN XYY CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT
D
lOR NCJ·47285 24 BY PSYCHIATRIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL
CRIMINALITY IN XYY AND XXY MEN DALGARD, O. S.
MEANS NCJ·57104 7
NCJ·36253 75 NORWEGIAN TWIN STUDY OF CRIMINAL·
COM ISH, K. A. ITY NCJ·36243 219
IMPLICATIONS OF SEX DIFFERENCES IN EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND
THE PREVALENCES OF ANTISOCIAL DALY, R. F.
SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES
PERSONALITY, ALCOHOLISM, AND NCJ·550B4 119 MENTAL ILLNESS AND PATIERNS OF BE·
CRIMINALITY FOR FAMILIAL TRANSMIS· HAVIOR IN 10 XYY MALES NCJ·57142
COMPTON, R. E. 202
SION NCJ·55499 172
DIAGNOSTIC EVALUATION OF COMMIT· D'ASARO,B.
PRELIMINARY STUDY OF CRIMINALITY TED DELINQUENTS (FROM YOUTH IN
AMONG TWINS (FROM BIOSOCIAL BLOOD HISTAMINE AND OTHER BLOOD
TROUBLE-A SYMPOSIUM, MAY 2·3
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, 1974 BY BETTY LOU KRATOVILLE-SEE COMPONENTS RELATED TO PERSON·
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 NCJ·35902) NC',J·35904 107
ALITY TRAITS AND CRIMINAL BEHAV·
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ·47285) lOR IN JAIL INMATES NCJ·12971
NCJ-47289 234 CONINGER, C. R. 28
REVIEW OF STUDIES OF CRIMINALITY IMPLICATIONS OF SEX DIFFERENCES IN DIET FOR REHABILITATION NCJ·12934
AMONG TWINS (FROM BIOSOCIAL THE PREVALENCES OF ANTISOCIAL 108
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, PERSONALITY, ALCOHOLISM, AND
DIET·VITAMIN PROGRAM FOR JAIL IN·
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 CRIMINALITY FOR FAMILIAL TRANSMIS·
MATES NCJ·55675 109
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ·47285) SION NCJ·55499 172
POLYAMINE LEVELS IN JAIL INMATES
NCJ·472B8 279 CONNERS, C. K. NCJ·14341 230
XYY AND XXY MEN-CRIMINALITY AND DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN IN CHILDREN WITH
VITAMIN DIET PROGRAM FEASIBILITY
AGGRESGION (FROM BIOSOCIAL SEVERE TEMPER TANTRUMS NCJ·
STUDY NCJ·13048 310
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, 55083 112
DAVIS, P.J.
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 TREATMENT OF YOUNG DELINQUENT
BOYS WITH DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN THREE THYROTOXIC CRIMINALS NCJ·
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ·47285) 563B6 302
NCJ·47291 313 SODIUM AND METHYPHENIDATE
NCJ·55091 304 DE BAULT, L E.
CINQUEGRANA, ,... INCIDENCE OF XYY AND XXY INDIVID·
RELUCTANT DELINQUENT NCJ·4B622 CORTES, J. B.
UALS IN A SECURITY HOSPITAL POPU·
274 DELINQUENCY AND CRIME-A BIOPSY·
LATION NCJ·56585 115
CHOSOCIAL APPROACH EMPIRICAL,
CLARK, G. R. THEORETICAL, AND PRACTICAL AS· DEBRAY,O.
CHROMOSOME ERRORS IN MEN WITH PECTS OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, BIO·
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR COMPARISON 11799 91 CHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN, AND CRIMI·
OF SELECTED MEN WITH KLINE· COTT,A. NALITY (In French) NCJ·39375 41
FELTER'S SYNDROME AND XYY CHRO· ETIOLOGY OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, DE HAAS, A. M. L.
MOSOME PATIEFIN NCJ·54106 DRUG ABUSE AND JUVENILE DELIN· EPILEPSV AND CRIMINALITY NCJ·55066
44 QUENCY (FROM ECOLOGIC·BIOCHEMI· t31
CLARVSSE, H. J. CAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT OF DEKINER, p, I
I
FUNCTIONAL ANOMAI.IES IN E E G'S DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1978, CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, BIO·
(ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) OF A BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN-SEE NCJ· CHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN, AND CRIMI·
GROUP OF ZAIRIAN JUVENILE DELIN· 50444) NCJ·50448 140 NALITY (In French) NCJ·39375 41
QUENTS (In French) NCJ·44127 COX,D.N. DELANO, J. O.
153 CLINICAL AND EMPIRICAL CONCEPTIONS EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) STUDY
CLiMENT, C. E. OF PSYCHOPATHY, AND THE SELEC· OF DELINQUENT AND NONDELlN·
EPISODIC DYSCONTAOL-A STUDY OF TION OF, SUBJECTS FOR 'RESEARCH QUENT ADOLESCENTS NCJ·56736
130 VIOLENT PATIENTS NCJ·55215 (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- 121
136 APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1978, BY DERENCSENYI, A.
CLONINGER, C. R. R 0 HARE AND 0 SCHALLING-SEE XYY SURVEY IN AN INSTITUTION FOR
GENETIC ·ENVIRONMENTtI\L INTERAC· NCJ.57500) NCJ·57501 49 SEX OFFENDERS AND THE MENTALLY
TIONS AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOUR PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL RE· ILL NCJ·57013 319
(FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- SPONSES TO'THREAT OF AN AVERSIVE DElRE, T.
APPROACHES TO RESEARI'JH, 1978, BY STIMULUS NCJ·5fJ509 259 NOSOLOGY OF VIOLENCE (FROM
R D HARE AND D SCHAI.LlNG-SEE CCIX, R.O. NEURAL BASES OF, VIOLENCE AND AG·
NCJ·57500) NCJ·57504 157 EXTRA Y CHROMOSOME AND DEVIANT GRESSION, 1975, BY W F FIELDS AND
PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS ANl) CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR-A BIBLIOGRAPHY NCJ· W A SWEET -SEE NCJ·67520) NCJ·
RECIDIVISM-A FOLLOW·UP STUDY OF 01B65 143 67524 220

35
.---------------------------- ._----- ----.

DINGMAN, H. F. Author Index

DINGMAN, H. F. ELUOTT, F. A. SATION·SEEKING MOTIVE NCJ·56150


SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN KLINE· NEUROLOGICAL FACTORS IN VIOLENT 300
FELTER'S SYNDROME NCJ·55211 BEHAVIOR (THE DYSCONTROL SYN· FAULK,M.
287 DROME) (FROM VIOLENCE AND RE· OLINICAL AND EEG (ELECTROENCEPH
DINITZ,S. SPONSIBILITY. 1978. BY ROBERT L LAGRAM) STUDIES OF PRISON S
DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF SADOFF-SEE NCJ·53974) NCJ·53977 CHARGED WITH MURDER NCJ· 71
SOCIOPATHY BY MEANS OF DRUGS- 212 48
A SUMMARY REPORT NCJ·19432 ENGEL, E.
THE MAKING OF AN XYV NCJ·55110 FENYON, O. W.
104 EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND
OIXON,J.F. 301
ERUNO,I. SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES
BRAIN FUNCTION IN PROBLEM CHILDREN NCJ·55084 118
AND CONTROLS PSYCHOMETRIC, NEU· REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR·
MALITIES IN MENTALLY RETARDED EPILEPSY. AUTOMATISM, AND CRIME
ROLOGICAL, AND NCJ·55293 132
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC COM· MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY·
PARISONS NCJ·55216 30 CHOLOGICAL STUDY OF PATIENTS FIELDS, W. S.
WITH XYY AND XXYV KARYOTYPES
DOBBS,D.S. NCJ·56389 275 NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG·
VISUAL EVOKED RESPONSE AND FRE· GRESSION NCJ·57520 207
SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES IN
QUENCY DENSITY SPECTRA OF PRIS· MENTALLY RETARDED CRIMINALS FINLEY, S. C.
ONER·PATIENTS NCJ·57185 309 NCJ·56823 283 PRISON SURVEY FOR THE XYV KARYO·
DOWIS,R.T. ERVIN, F.R. TYPE IN TALL INMATES NCJ·57141
EFFECT OF A VISUAL TRAINING PRO· BIOLOGY OF INDIVIDUAL VIOLENCE-AN 238
GRAM ON JUVENILE DELINQUENCY OVERVIEW (FROM CRIMES OF VIO· FINLEY, W. H.
NCJ-45469 122 LENCE, 1969-SEE NCJ-00571) NCJ· PRISON SURVEY FOR THE XYY KARYO·
DRIVERj M. V. 55805 22 TYPE IN TALL INMATES NCJ·57141
CLINICAL AND EEG (ELECTROENCEPHO· EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-A STUDY OF 238
LAG RAM) STUDIES OF PRISONERS 130 VIOLENT PATIENTS NCJ·55215 FIRKOWSKA-MANKIEWICZ
CHAnGED WITH MURDER NCJ·57071 136 BIOPSYCHIC FACTORS AND JUVENILE
48 EVALUATION OF ORGANIC FACTORS IN DELINQUENCY (In French) NCJ·29715
DUBUNEAU, J. PATIENTS WITH IMPULSE DISORDERS 23
CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, BIO· AND EPISODIC VIOLENCE (FROM FOGOITT, R. H.
CHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN, AND CRIMI· ISSUES IN BRAIN/BEHAVIOR CONTROL, SKIN CONDUCTANCE RECOVERY IN ANTI·
NALITY (In French) NCJ·39375 41 1976, BY W L SMITH AND A KLING SEE SOCIAL ADOLESCENTS (FROM BIOSO·
DUFFY,J. C. NCJ·57467) NCJ·57468 141 CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR,
SEARCH FOR XYY SYNDROME IN PSY· PSYCHIATRIC STUDIES OF AGGRESSIVE 1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND
CHIATRICALLY DISTURBED CHILDREN BEHAVIOR IN PENITENTIARY INMATES KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ·
AND ADOLESCENT JUVENILE DELlN· (FROM NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE 47285) NCJ-47292 288
QUENTS-A PRELIMINARY REPORT AND AGGRESSION, 1975, BY W S FORDE, R.A.
NCJ.56391 280 FIELDS AND W H SWEET -SEE NCJ· TWIN STUDIES, INHERITANCE AND CRIMI·
DUPONT,A. 57520) NCJ·57525 248 NALITY-A CRITICISM OF DALGARD
REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR· EVEFim,B. AND KRINGLEN NCJ·56512 305
MALITIES IN MENTALLY RETARDED SURVEY OF Y CHROMOSOME VARIANTS FOSTER, T.
MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY· AND PERSONALITY IN 436 BORSTAL DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF
CHOLOGICAL STUDY OF PATIENTS LADS AND 254 CONTROLS NCJ·36244 SOCIOPATHY BY MEANS OF DRUGS-
WITH XVV AND XXYY KARYOTYPES a8 A SUMMARY REPORT NCJ·19432
NCJ.56389 275 EVSENCK, H. J. 104
DURFEE, K. E. CRIME ,'"ND PERSONALITY NCJ-04546 FOX, R. O.
CROOKED EARS AND THE BAD BOY SYN· 58 XVY OFFENDEA-A MODERN MYTH
DROME-ASYMMETRY AS AN INDICA· CRIME AND PERSONALITY, 3D ED. NCJ· NCJ-05391 318
TOR OF MINIMAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION 42849 80 FRAZELLE, J.
NCJ.56735 83 PSYCHOPATHY, PERSONALITY, AND GE· PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL RE·
.DZIK,D. NETICS (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAV· SPONSES TO THREAT OF AN AVERSIVE
BEHAVIORAL OPTOMETRIC VISION-A lOUR-APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, STIMULUS NCJ·56509 :168
PRACTICAL AND COMPREHENSIVE 1978, BY R 0 HARE AND D SCHALL· FRIEDRICH, U.
PLAN FOR JUVENILE DELINQUENCY lNG-SEE NCJ·57500) NCJ·57503 CHILDHOOD OF MALES WITH THE XYY
CONTROL NCJ·54021 13 203 SYNDROME NCJ·57144 40
VISION AND THE JUVENILE DELINQUENT EYSENCK, S. B. G. LENGTH OF THE Y CHROMOSOME IN
NCJ.54020 308 PSYCHOPATHY, PERSONALITY, AND GE· CRIMINAL MALES NCJ·56580
NETICS (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAV· 193
lOUR-APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, FUCCILLO, D. A-
E 1978, BY R D HARE AND D SCHALL·
lNG-SEE NCJ·57500) NCJ·57503
LACK OF ASSOCIATION BElWEEN DE·
FECTIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY
283
ECONOMOU·MAVROU, C. OF HERPESVIRUS HOMIN IS N{,"'·
XYY SYNDROME IN YOUNG GREEK DE· 57105 184
TAINEES NCJ·56897 324 FU';LLGRABE, U.
EDWARD~, J. A.
STUDY OF THE XVV SYNDROME IN TALL
F IS THERE A HEREDITARY CRIMINALITY?
(In German) NCJ·56427 180
MEN AND JUVENILE DELINQUENTS FALEK,A,
NCJ.57136 297 ATTEMPT TO IDENTIFY PRISONERS WITH
EISENBERO, I. AN XYY CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT G
BLACKBOARD JUMBLE NCJ·52026 BY PSYCHIATRIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL
27 MEANS NCJ·57104 7 GATTI,F.M.
RELUCTANT DELINQUENT NCJ·48622 FARLEY, F. H. DELINQUENCY AND CRIME-A BIOPSY·
274 TEST OF A THEORY OF DELINQUENCY- CHOSOCIAL APPROACH EMPIRICAL,
EWOT.O.R. 'DELINQUENT' BEHAVIORS AMONG IN·' THEORETIOAL, AND PRACTICAL AS.
GENETICS OF HUMAN AGGRESSION STITUTIONALIZED DRUG ADDICTS AS A PECTS OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·
NCJ.56949 181 FUNCTION OF AROUSAL AND THE SEN· 11799 91

36
'--------.---~--

Author Index HIPPCHEN, L ~.

GIBBENS, T. C. N. GUPTA, A. K. PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL AC-


DELINQUENT AND HIS BRAIN NCJ· BUCCAL SMEAR AND DERMATOGLYPHIC TIVITY IN A MIXED·MOTIVE GAME SITU.
56893 100 STUDIES IN JUVENILE DELINQUENCY ATION NCJ·56510 258
MEDICINE AND CRIME NCJ·57496 NCJ·57143 32 PSYCHOPATHY AND PHYSIOLOGICAL RE·
201 GUZE.S.8. SPONSES TO THREAT OF AN AVERSIVE
GLASER,O. GENETIC ·ENVIRONMENTAL INTERAC· STIMULUS NCJ·56509 258
HANDBOOK OF CRIMINOLOGY NCJ· TIONS AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOUR PSYCHOPATHY AND RESPONSE TO
16488 182 (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- ELECTRICAL STIMULATION NCJ·
GLASOW, O. L- APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1978, BY 55622 280
CAN FINGERF RINT PATTERNS PREDICT R D HARE AND 0 SCHALLING-SEE PSYCHOPATHY, FEAR AROUSAL AND AN·
CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR? NCJ·19273 NCJ·57500) NCJ·57504 157 TICIPATED PAIN NCJ·55859 261
34 PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS AND CRIMINAl. PSYCHOPATHY (FROM RESEARCH IN
GOLDMAN.H. RECIDIVISM-A FOLLOW·UP STUDY OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1975, BY PETEA
DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF FEMALE CRIMINALS NCJ·57139 H VENABLES AND MARGARET J CHRIS·
SOCIOPATHY BY MEANS OF DRUGS- 245 TIE) NCJ·57494 282
A SUMMARY REPORT NCJ·194a2 TEMPORAL GRADIENT OF FEAR AROU·
104 SAL IN PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·55780
GOLDSTEIN, M. H m
CLINICAL STUDIES NCJ·56892 50 HARMAt4SCHI. A.
GOODENOUGH. O. R. HABERLANDT. W. XYY·SYNDROME-CLINICAL AND BEHAV·
CRIMINALITY IN xV'( AND XXY MEN CRIMINALITY AND CHROMOSOMAL CON· 10RAL TYPOLOGY NCJ·57210
NCJ·36253 75 STITUTION-RESULTS OF A GENETIC 323
xV'( AND XXY MEN·-CRIMINALITY AND STUDY OF THREE POPULATIONS OF HASSE~ C. V.
AGGRESSION (FROM BIOSOCIAL CRIMINALS AND OF A CONTROL CRIMINAL LAW V CRIMINOLOGY-A
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, GROUP FROM THE GENERAL POPULA· QUESTION OF RESPONSIBILITY NCJ·
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 TION (In German) NCJ·16332 72 29413 88
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ-47285) HADDOX. V.
ENURESIS, FIRE SEnlNG, AND ANIMAL HAWORTH, M. P.
NCJ-47291 313 ESTABLISHING A PROGRAM FOR THE
GOODMAN. J. O. CRUELTY IN MALE ADOLESCENT DE·
L1NQUENTS-A TRIAD PREDICTIVE OF CHEMICALLY DEPENDENT OFFENDER
BEHAVIOR OF HYPERSEXUAL DELIN· (FROM AMERICAN CORRECTIONAL AS.
QUENT GIRLS NCJ·57102 11 VIOLENT BEHAVIOR NCJ·55406
127 SOCIATION PROCEEDINGS OF THE
GOTTESMAN, I. I. 106TH ANNUAL CONGRESS OF COR·
IMPLICATIONS OF SEX DIFFERENCES IN HAEFNER. H.
MENTALLY DISORDERED VIOLENT OF· RECTIONS, 1976-SEE NCJ-49145)
THE PREVALENCES OF ANTISOCIAL NCJ·49155 138
PERSONALITY, ALCOHOLISM, AND FENDERS NCJ·57140 203
HAHN, N. F. HAYASH'. S. A.
CRIMINALITY FOR FAMILIAL TRANSMIS· STUDY OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY BY
SION NCJ·55499 172 DEFECTIVE DELINQUENCY MOVEMENT-
A HISTORY OF THE BORN CRIMINAL IN TWIN METHOD (In english and Japanese)
GDnLIEB.B. NCJ·55310 298
WAY THEY ATE WAS A CRIME NCJ· NEW YORK STATE NCJ·56126
89 HEALV, K. M.
57277 311 HEIGHT AND SERIOUSNESS OF CAIME IN
HARE,A.S.
GOTTLIEB. M. I. PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-A BIBLlOG· XYY MEN NCJ·58889 1114
LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE RAPHY NCJ·57529 251 HELLON. C. P.
DELINQUENCY NCJ·56546 1aa HARE,R. D. CRIME, MALNUTRITION, AND OTHER
GRAPIN.P. ACOUISITION AND GENERALIZATION OF FOAMS OF CEREBRAL TRAUMA NCJ·
CRIMINOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY (In A CONDITIONED·FEAR RESPONSE IN 34578 fl1
French) NCJ·14891 77 PSYCHOPATHIC AND NONPSYCHO· HENRIKSEN. F.
GREGERMAN. R. I. pATHIC CRIMINALS NCJ·55858 2 INCIDENCE OF CHROMOSOME ABERRA·
THREE THYROTOXIC CRIMINALS NCJ· CLINICAL AND EMPIRICAL CONCEPTIONS TIONS AMONG MALES IN A DANISH
~386 302 OF PSYCHOPATHY, AND THE SELEC· YOUTH PRISON NCJ·56460 173
GREGURAS. F. M. TION OF SUBJECTS FOR RESEARCH HENTIG, H.
ESTABLISHING AN OPERATIONAL DEFINI· (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- CRIMINAL AND HIS VICTIM-STUDIES IN
TION OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY APPROACHES TO ReSEARCH, 1978, BY THE SOCIOBIOLOGY OF CRIME: NCJ·
NCJ·46419 13e R 0 HARE AND 0 SCHALLING-SEE 49952 . 6,3
NCJ·51500) NOJ·57501 49 HIGGINS.J.
GRIFFITHS, A. W. ELECTRODERMAL AND CARDIOVASCU·
PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL IN· GENETICS, ENVIRONMENT AND PSYCHO·
LAR CORRELATES OF PSYCHOPATHY PATHOLOGY NCJ·47446 " 160
VESTIGATION OF XYV PRISONERS (FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR-
NCJ·56891 24. APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1978, BY HINTON. J. W.
GROESBECK, C. R 0 HARE AND 0 SCHALLING-SEE PLASMA CATECHOLAMINES, STRESS
BLOOD HISTAMINE AND OTHER BLOOD NCJ·575001 NCJ·57502 125 AND AGGRESSION IN MAXIMUM SECU·
COMPONENTS RELATED TO PERSON· PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-A BIBLlOG· RITY PATIENTS NCJ·57100 228
ALITY TRAITS AND CRIMINAL BEHAV· RAPHY NCJ·57529 251 HIPPCHEN. L. J.
lOR IN JAIL INMATES NCJ·12971 PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-Ap· BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO OFFEND·
28 PROACHES TO RESEARCH NCJ· ER REHABILITATION NCJ.4015B
DIET·VITAMIN PROGRAM FOR JAIL IN· 57500 252 16
MATES NCJ·55675 10t PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-SOME BIOCHEMISTRY OF STRESS REACTIONS
POLYAMINE LEVELS IN JAIL INMATES RECENT THeORY AND RESEARCH AND CRIME NOJ·53027 18
NCJ·14341 230 (FROM ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL ECOLOGIC·BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES
GUNN,J.C. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1971, BY TO TREATMENT Or. DELINQUENTS ANO
CRIMINALITY AND VIOLENCE IN EPILtP· HARRY E ADAMS AND WILLIAM K CRIMINALS NCJ·50444 111'1
TIC PRISONERS NCJ·57070. 73 BOARDMAN) NCJ·57479 263 NEED FOR A NEW APPROACH TO 'THE
EPILEPSY. AUTOMATISM, AND CRIME PSYCHOPATHY NCJ·55253 255 DELINQUENT·CRIMINAL PROBLEM
NCJ.55203 132 PSYOHOPATHY AND AUTONOMIC CONDI· (FROM eCOLOGIC·BIOCHEMICAL AP·
EPILEPSV IN PAlSONS-A DIAGNOSTIC TIONING NCJ·55939 26$ PROACHES TO TREATMENT OF OELIN·
SURVEY NCJ·56731 133 PSYCHOPATHY AND ELECTRODERMAL QUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1976, BY
PREVALENCE OF EPILEPSY AMONG PRIS. RESPONSES TO NON SIGNAL STIMULA· LEONARD J HIPPCHeN-SEE NCJ·
ONERS NCJ.56894 237 TION NCJ·55633 257 50444) NCJ·50445 200

37
I
~I
HIRSCHHORN, K. Author Inde. .

HIRSCHHORN, K. ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC FAC·


CRIMINALITY IN XYY AND XXY MEN TORS IN PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND K
NCJ·36253 75 CRIMINALITY NCJ·31564 128
XYY AND XXY MEN-CRIMINALITY AND EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAl INTERACTION KAHN,J.
AGGRESSION (FROM BIOSOCIAl RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF SO· SURVEY OF Y CHROMOSOME VARIANTS
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977, CIOENVIRONMENTAl AND INDIVIDUAL AND PERSONALITY IN 436 BORSTAL
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI· LADS AND 254 CONTROLS NCJ·36244
CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ·47265) NAl BEHAVIOR (FROM BIOSOCIAL
NCJ·47291 313 BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. BY S A KAISER, G.
HOFFER, A. MEDNICK... -SEE NCJ·47285) NCJ· GENETICS AND CRIME-INTERNATI Al
ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY AND 47286 142 SYMPOSIUM ON CRIMINOLOGY, 20-
CRIME (CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND GENETIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FAC· PROCEEDINGS, 1975 NCJ·36692
THE ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH TORS IN ASOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· 159
CONFERENCE) NCJ·40034 223 50349 155 KARLI, P.
RELATION OF CRIME TO NUTRITION HUUSKO, S. CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, BIO·
NCJ·57290 269 BRAIN INJURY AND CRIMINALITY-A CHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN, AND CRIMI·
SOME THEORETICAL PRINCIPLES BASIC RETROSPECTIVE STUDY NCJ·56946 NALITY (In French) NCJ·39375 41
TO ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCHIATRIC 31 KECKICH, W. A.
TREATMENT (FROM ECOlOGIC·BIO· EFFECT OF BRAIN INJURY ON SOCIAL NEUROlEPTICS-VIOlENCE AS A MANI·
CHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREAT· ADAPTABILITY NCJ·38028 123 FESTATION OF AKATHISIA NCJ·57213
MENT OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMI· 210
NAlS, 1977, BY lEONARD J HIPP· KEILlTZ, I.
CHEN-SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ·50447
292
J SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE LINK BE·
TWEEN lEARNING DISABILITIES AND
HOFFMAN, B. F. JUVENilE DELINQUENCY NCJ·50951
JACOBS, P. A.
TWO NEW CASES OF XYY CHROMOSOME 291.
FORTY·SEVEN, XYY MALE WITH SPECIAL KELLNER, R.
COMPLEMENT -AND A REVIEW OF REFERENCE TO BEHAVIOR NCJ·
THE LITERATURE NCJ·56624 PLASMA TESTOSTERONE LEVELS IN THE
56807 149 RAPIST NCJ·56730 229
306
SEX CHROMOSOME ANEUPLOIDY AND KELLY, F. J.
HOOK, E. B. CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·57018
BEHAVIORAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE INTElliGENCE AND DElINQUENCY-A
284 RECONSIDERATION NCJ·56545
HUMAN XYY GENOTYPE NCJ·07896 JACOBSEN, P.
12 177
REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR· KERR,J.
HEIGHT AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR IN MALITIES IN MENTAllY RETARDED
XY AND XYY BOYS NCJ·54289 CRIME AND DYSLEXIA NCJ·11932
MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY· 58
183 CHOlOGICAl STUDY OF PATIENTS KESSLER, S.
HEIGHT AND SERIOUSNESS OF CRIME IN WITH XYY AND XXYY KARYOTYPES
XYY MEN NC,I·56889 164 GENETICS OF HUMAN AGGRESSION
NCJ·56389 275 NCJ·56949 161
HOUSLEY, R. JAVIK, L. F. XYY KARYOTYPE AND CRIMINALITY-A
CRIMINAL LAW-THE XYY CHROMO· HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE EXTRA Y REVIEW NCJ·56547 317
SOME COMPLEMENT AND CRIMINAL CHROMOSOME-FACT OR FANTASY? KIDO,M.
CONDUCT NCJ·57211 65 NCJ·56387 168 EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) STUDY
HULFISH, B. JEFFERY, C. R. OF DELINQUENT ADOLESCENTS WITH
NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST BIOSOCIAl LEARNING THEORY AND REFERENCE TO RECIDIVISM AND
AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYCHOPATHOl· CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·40127 MURDER NCJ·56B15 120
OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, 1977, 26 KIM,D.S.
BY RUSSEll R MONROE ET Al) NCJ· CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AND THE PHYSICAL HEIGHT AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR IN
57188 211 ENVIRONMENT -A PERSPECTIVE XY AND XYY BOYS NCJ·542i39
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS NCJ·41 000 84 163
WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· CRIMINOLOGY AS AN INTERDISCIPLlN· KING,J.
39871 213 ARY BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE NCJ· XYY SYNDROME-A DANGEROUS MYTH
HUNCKE, S. 50790 80 NCJ·57447 321
PREDICTION OF EEG (ElECTROENCEPH· ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN AND THE PRE· KIRKEGAARD-SOAENSEN, L
ALOGRAM) ABNORMALITIES IN ADO· VENTION OF BEHAVIORAL DISORDERS EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAL INTERACTION
LESCENT DELINQUENTS NCJ·58772 AND CRIMINALITY (FROM CRIME PRE· RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF SO·
232 VENTION STRATEGIES OF THE 70'S, CIOENVIRONMENTAl AND INDIVIDUAL
HUNTER, H. 1974-SEE NCJ·48253) NCJ·4B256 FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI·
KLINEFELTEA'S SYNDROME AND DELIN· 129 NAl BEHAVIOR (FAOM BIOSOCIAl
QUENCY NCJ·57127 183 JENSEN, J. T. BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, BY S A
PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE MEDNICK, .. -SEE NCJ·47285) NCJ.
HURLEY, W. P. 47286 142
CHROMOSOMES OF MALE PATIENTS IN A XYY SYNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S
SYNDROME IN AN INSTITUTION FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS
SECURITY PRISON NCJ·570B3 OF CRIMINALITY, 2-A DESCRIPTION
47 CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·58296
238 OF REGISTERED CRIMINALITY IN THE
HURWITZ,I. . HIGH·RISK AND lOW·RISK FAMILIES
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF JOHNSON, D. R.
(FROM BIOSOCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL
NORMAL BOYS, DELINQUENT BOYS, CROWDING AND URBAN CRIME RATES
BEHAVIOR, 1977, BY SARNOFF A MED·
AND BOYS WITH LEARNING PROBLEMS NCJ·36637 85
NICK ... -SEE NCJ·47265) NCJ.47294
NCJ·56593 217 JOHNSTON, E.
243
HUTCHINGS, B. INCIDENCE OF XYY AND XXY INDW/D· KLASS, D. W.
CRIMINALITY IN ADOPTEES AND THEIR UALS IN A SECURITY HOSPITAL POPU· EEG(ElECTROENCEPHAlOGRAM)STUDY
ADOPTIVE AND BIOLOGICAL PAR· LATION NCJ·565B5 175 OF II1)EllNQUENT AND NONDElIN.
ENTS-A PILOT STUDY (FROM BIOSO· JONEJA, M. G. QUENT ADOLESCENTS NC',J·5673B
CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, CHROMOSOMAL STUDIES OF PRISON IN· 121
1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND MATES WITH RELATIONSHIP TO OF· KLEIN·VOGLER, U.
KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ· FENCE CHARACTERISTICS NCJ·56733 CRIMINALITY AND CHROMOSOMAL CON.
472B5) NCJ·47290 74 43 STITUTION-RESUlTS OF A GENETIC

38
Author Index MA1SANIOrlS, N.

STUDY OF THREE POPULATIONS OF MALE DELINQUENTS NCJ·55803 LUTZ, J. H.


CRIMINALS AND OF A CONTROL 124 THREE THYROTOXIC CRIMINALS NCJ·
GROUP FROM THE GENERAL POPULA· LEWIS, D.O. 56388 302
TION (In German) NCJ·16332 72 DELINQUENCY. PARENTAL PSYCHO·
KLODIN, V. PATHOLOGY, AND PARENTAL CRIMI·
HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE EXTRA Y
CHROMOSOME-FACT OR FANTASY?
NALITY -CLINICAL AND EPIDEMIOLOG·
ICAL FINDINGS NCJ·56881 96
M
NCJ·56387 168 DELINQUENCY, PSYCHOMOT(:)R EPILEp· MCCLEARN, G. E.
KNOP,J. TIC SYi:IPTOMS, AND PARANOID IDE· BIOLOGICAL BASES OF SOCIAL BEHAV·
EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAL INTERACTION ATION-ATRIAD NCJ·56742 97 lOR WITH SPECIFIC REFERENCE TO
RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF SO· MEDICAL HISTORIES OF DELINQUENT VIOLENT BEHAVIOR (FROM CRIMES OF
CIOENVIRONMENTAL AND INDIVIDUAL AND NONDELINQUENT CHILDREN-AN VIOLENCE, 19G9-SEE NCJ·OO571)
FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI· EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY NCJ·57064 NCJ·55804 20
NAL BEHAVIOR (FROM BIOSOCIAL 1\19 MCCLEMONT, W. F.
BASES OF CRIMINAL I:IEHAVIOR, BY S A LIEBER, A. L. CRIMINAL PATIENTS WITH XVV SEX·
MEDNICK... -SEE NCJ·47285) NCJ· HOMICIDES AND THE LUNAR CYCLE- CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT NCJ·
47286 142 TOWARD A THEORY OF LUNAR INFLU· 56737 68
KNOTT, J. R. ENCE ON HUMAN EMOTIONAL DIS· MCCREARV, C. P.
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAMS IN PSY· TURBANCE NCJ·26026 166 TRAIT AND TYPE DIFFERENCES AMONG
CHOPATHIC PERSONALITY AND IN HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE LUNAR MALE AND FEMALE ASSAULTIVE AND
MURDERERS (FROM APPLICATIONS OF SYNODIC CYCLE NCJ·49288 169 NONASSAULTIVE OFFENDERS NCJ·
ELECTROENCt:PHALOGRAPHY IN PSY· LINDNER, L. 57191 303
CHIATRY, 1965, BY WILLIAM P WILSON) DESIGNED TREATMENT PROGRAM OF MCCULLOCH, D.
NCJ·55847 126 SOCIOPATHY BY MEANS OF DRUGS- CRITERION OF BRAIN INSTABILITY-EEG
KNOX, S.J. A SUMMARY REPORT NCJ·19432 (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) ACTIVA·
EPILEPTIC AUTOMATISM AND VIOLENCE 104 TION (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN
NCJ·56890 134 LlON,J. R. AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 1918, BY
KOHEN·RAZ, R. EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-A STUDY OF RUSSELL R MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119)
DEVELOPMENTAL ANALYSIS OF EEG 130 VIOLENT PATIENTS NCJ·55215 NCJ·53124 81
(ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) ABNOR· 136 MCDANAL, C. E.
MALITIES IN JUVENILE DELINQUENTS NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST PRISON SURVEY FOR THE XYY KARYO·
NCJ.56741 105 AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYCHOPATHOL· TYPE IN TALL INMATES NCJ·57141
EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, 1971, 239
RORSCHACH FINDINGS IN A GROUP OF BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET AL) NCJ· . MCDONALD, M.
JUVENILE DELINQUENTS SUSPECT OF 57188 211 EPISODIC DYSCONTROL-DEFINITIONS,
ORGANIC BRAIN DISORDER NCJ· DESCRIPTIONS, AND MEASUREMENT
56739 110 NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN AG·
KRAMER, R. WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· GRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 1978, BY RUS·
TREATMENT OF YOUNG DELINQUENT 39671 213 SELL R MONROE.:-..SEE NCJ·53119)
BOYS WITH DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN REVIEW OF CURRENT RESEARCH (FROM NCJ·53120 137
SODIUM AND METHYPHENIDATE BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN AGGRESSIVE NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST
NCJ·55091 304 CRIMINALS, 1978, BY RUSSELL R AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYCHOPATHOL·
KREUl, L. E. MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119) NCJ· OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, 1977.
ASSESSMENT OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAV· 53121 278 BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET AL) NOJ·
lOR AND PLASMA TESTOSTERONE IN A LlTSINGER, W. C. J. R. 57188 211
YOUNG CRIMINAL POPULATION NCJ· DELINQUENCY AND HEALTH STATUS NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS
~100 6 NCJ·51248 02 WITH ANTISOCiAl.. BEHAVIOR NOJ·
KRINGLEN, E. l.LOYD, C. W. 39871 213
NORWEGIAN TWIN STUDY OF CRIMINAL. HORMONES AND AGGRESSION (FROM MALLORY, W. A.
ITY NCJ·36243 219 NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG· DIAGNOSIS OF SPECIFIC LEARNING DIS·
KUPFER, D. J. GRESSION, 1975, BY W S FIELDS AND ABILITIES IN A JUVENILE DgLlNOUENT
NOSOLOGY OF VIOLENCE (FROM W H SWEET -SEE NCJ·57520) NCJ· POPULATION NCJ·52114 106
NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG· 57521 161 LEARNING HANDICAP-THE UNDEAD/AG·
GRESSION, 1975, BY W F FIELDS AND LOEB,J. NOSED DISABILITY NCJ·54233
W A SWEET -SEE NCJ·57520) NCJ· PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS 1112
57524 220 OF CRIMINALITY, 3 ELECTRODERMAL MANNARINO, F.
J(URENT, J. E. RESPONSE PATIERNS (FROM BIOSO· ACADEMIC, PERCEPTUAL, AND VISUAL
LACK OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN DE· CIAL. BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, LEVELS OF DETAINED JUVENILES
Ft:CTIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY 1971, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMICAL AP.
OF HERPESVIRUS HOMINIS NCJ· KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ· PROACHES TO TREATMENT OF DELIN·
57105 194 47265) NCJ·47295 244 QUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1918, BY
LOEFFELHOLZ, P. LEONARD J HIPPCHEN-SEE NOJ·
INCIDENCE or:: XYY AND XXV INDIVID· 50444) NOJ.·50457' 1
L UALS IN A SECURITY HOSPITAL POPU·
LATION NCJ·56585 175
MANNE,8.H.
LACK OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN DE.
LAMB, W.R. LOOKER, A. FECTIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY
INTERVENTION WITH JUVENILE DELIN· DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN IN CHILDREN WITH OF HERPESVIRUS HOMINIS NOJ·
SEVERE TEMPER TANTRUMS NCJ· 57105 114
QUENTS (FROM ECOLOGIC.BIOCHEMI·
CAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT OF 55083 112 MARINELLO, M.... . .
DELINOUENTS AND CRIMINALS, 1976, LOOMIS, 8. D. STUDY OF THE XVV SYNDROME IN TALL
BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN SEE NCJ· EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AB· MEN AND JUVENILE DELINQUEN'\'S
50444) NCJ·50456 178 NORMALITIES AS A CORRELATE OF NOJ·at13s 2$7
LARAVA, P. BEHAVIOR IN ADOLESCENT MALE DE- MASTERSON, J.
LONGER Y CHROMOSOME IN CRIMINALS LINQUENTS NOJ·56140 117 CYTOGENIC STUDIES IN A MAXIMUM se-
NCJ.57187 197 PREDICTION OF EEG (ELEOTROENCEPH· CURITY HOSPITAl. NCJ·5S8aB ..
LEFKOWITZ, M. M. ALOGRAM) ABNORMALITIES IN ADO· MATSA"IOTIS,N.
EFFECTS OF DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN ON LESCENT DELINQUENTs NcJ·5&772 XYV SYNDROME IN yOUNG GREEK De·
DISRUPTiVe BEHAVIOR STUDY OF 232 TAINEI:S NCJ-56897 324

39
~.~J,.~"~~I~.--------~--------~----------------~--~----------~-

MATSUYAMA, s. S. Author Index

MAT8UYAMA, 8. S. NICK... -SEE NCJ-47285)


NCJ-47294 1978, BY RUSSELL R MONROE-SEE
HUMAN AGGRESSION AND THE EXTRA Y 243 NCJ,53119) NCJ-53123 12
CHROMOSOME-FACT OR FANTASY? PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS MEDICAL MODEL IN CRIMINOLOGY
NCJ-56387 180 OF CRIMINALITY, 3 ELECTRODERMAL (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION AN
1lAUERS, A. J. RESPONSE PATTERNS (FROM BI050- DANGEROUSNESS, j~78, BY D
LEARNING DISABILITIES AND DELIN- CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, BERGE·ALTMEJD-SEE NCJ·5
QUENT YOUTH (FROM YOUTH IN 1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND NCJ·574U7
TROUBLE-A SYMPOSIUM, MAY 2-3, KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-:-SEE NCJ· NEUROLOGIC ANDINGS IN RE IVIST
1974 BY BETTY LOU KRATOVILLE-SEE 47265) NCJ-47295 244 AGGRESSORS (FROM PSYC ATHOL·
NC.J.:~5902) NCJ-35905 185 SKIN CONDUCTANCE RECOVERY IN ANTI- OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION, 19n,
YAWHS, S. It SOCIAL ADOLESCENTS (FROM 81050- BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET AL) NCJ·
CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY (FROM CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 57168 211
PROGRESS IN NEUROLOGY ANI) ~SY­ 1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND NEURO~SVCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS
CHIATRY. V 22, 1968) NCJ·57212 KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ· WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·
89 47285) NCJ-47292 2U 39971 213
CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY (FROM XYY AND XXY MEN-CRIMINALITY AND REVIEW OF CURRENT RESEARCH (FROM
PROGRESS IN NEUROLOGY AND PSy- AGGRESSION (FROM BIOSOCIAL BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN AGGRESSIVE
CHIATRY, V 27.,1972, BY E A SPIEGEL) BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977. CRIMINALS, 1978, BY RUSSELL R
NCJ·57184 70 BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0 MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119) NCJ·
MAWSON. A. R. CHRISTIANSEN -SEE NCJ-472B5) 53121 271
HYPERTENSION, BLOOD PRESSURE NCJ-47291 313 MONTAGU, A.
VARIABILITY, ANO JUVENILE DELIN· MEKANANDHA, v. CHROMOSOMES AND CRIME NCJ·
QUENCY NCJ·54022 171 CYTOGENETIC STUDY IN SEVERE JUVE· 57012 48
STRESS, AROUSAL, AND JUVENILE DE· NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·56896 IS MAN INNATELY AGGRESSIVE? (FROM
LlNQUENCY-HYPOTHESIS NCJ· 87 NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG·
54023 294 MELNYK,J. GRESSION, 1975, BY W S FIELDS AND
MEDNICK, S. A. XYV SURVEY IN AN INSTITUTION FOR W H SWEET -SEE NCJ·57520) NCJ·
BIO-SOCIAl.. THEORV OF THE LEARNING SEX OFFENDERS AND THE MENTALLY 57527 170
OF l..',W-ABIOING BEHAVIOR NCJ· ILL NCJ·57013 310 MOORE,S.M.
39872 15 MIKKELSEN, M. FORTY.SEVEN, 't:fY SYNDROME, HEIGHT
BIOSC"AIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAV· REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR· AND INSTITUTIONWZATION OF JUVE·
lOR NCJ-47285 24 MALITIES IN MENTALLY RETARDED NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·57016
BIOSOCIAL FACTORS AND PRIMARY PRE· MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY·
VENTION OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR CHOLOGICAL STUDY OF PATIENTS MOOS, R. H.
(FROM NEW PATHS IN CRIMINOLOGY WITH XYY AND XXYY KARYOTYPES XYY KARYOTYPE AND CRIMINALITY-A
INTERDISCIPLINARY AND INTERCUL· NCJ·56389 275 REVIEW NCJ·56547 317
TURAL EXPLORATIONS, 1979, BY SAR· SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES IN MOSIER, H. O.
NOFF A MEDNICK AND S GIORA MENTALLY RETARDED CRIMINALS SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN KLINE· I ~

SHOHAM-SEE NCJ·55340) NCJ· NCJ·56823 283 FELTER'S SYNDROME NCJ·55217


55343 25 MILLER, J. E. 217
CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE DEMONISM REVISITED-THE XVZ CHRO· MOYER,K.E.
ROLE OF BIOLOGICAL FACTORS IN THE MOSOMAL ANOMALY NCJ-06174 KINOS OF AGGRESSION AND THEIR
ETIOLOGY OF CRIMINALITY NCJ· 103 PHYSIOLOGICAL BASIS NCJ-550B2
:moo . 68 MILSTEIN, V. 112
CRIMINALITY IN ADOPTeES AND THEIR BEHAVIOR DISORDERS OF CHILDHOOD PSYCHOLOGY OF AGGRESSION AND THE
ADOPTIVE AND BIOLOGICAL PAR· AND THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM IMPLICATIONS FOR AGGRESSION CON·
ENTS-A PILOT STUDY (FROM BIOSO- NCJ·55251 10 TROl (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION
OIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, MISSOUT,J. AND DANGEROUSNESS, 1978, BY 0 LA·
19n, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SENSITIVITY BERGE·AlTMEJD-SEE NCJ·57484)
KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ· TO TOUCH, WEIGHT AND PAIN AMONG NCJ·574B6 240
47285) NCJ-47290 74 OBSERVATION CENTER MINORS AND MULLEN, d. M.
CRIMINALITY IN XVY AND XXY MEN VARIOUS GROUPS OF NORMAL FACTORS OF DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN
NCJ·3B253 75 ,-
MINORS, PART 2-FRANCE (In Fronch) MENTAL PATIENTS NCJ·66964 ;.
EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAL INTERACTION NCJ·30279 54 146
RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF SO·
CIOENVIRONMENTAL AND INDIVIDUAL
MONEIM, S. A. MUWGAN,W. t
PSVCHOSOCIAL AND DYSLEXIA, SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABIL·
FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI·
NAL BEHAVIOR (FROM BIOSOCIAL ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC STUD· ITY AND DELINQUENCY NCJ-07537
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, BY S A IES OF EGYPTIAN MURDERERS NCJ· 114
MEDNICK.,.-SEE ~CJ-472B5) NCJ· 50956 285 MURRAY, C. A.
472"8 142 MONROE, R. R. . LINK BETWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES
GENETIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FAC- ANIMAL GENETICS AND AGGRESSIVE BE· AND JUVENilE DELINQUENCY-CUR.
TORS IN ASOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· HAVIOR (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION RENT THEORY AND KNOWLEDGE
50349 165 AND DANGEROUSNESS 1976, BY D LA· NCJ·36635 105
GENETICS, ENVIRONMENT AND PSYCHO· BERGE·ALTMEJD BY 0 LABERGE·ALT· L1I11K BETWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES
PATHOLOGY NCJ-47446 180 ME-tO-SEE NCJ·57484) NCJ·57485 AND JUVENilE DELINQUENCV-CUR·
PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS 6 RENT THEORY AND KNOWLEDGE-EX·
OF CRIMINALITY, INTRODlICTION BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN AGGRESSIVE ECUTIVE SUMMARY NCJ·36636
(FROM BIOSOCIAL BAses OF CRIMINAL
sEHIIVIQR 19n, BY SARNOFF A MED-
CRIMINALS NcJ·53119
CRITERION OF BRAIN INSTABILITY-EEG
28 1"
NICK AND KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN- (ELECtROENCEPHALOGRAM) ACTIVA·
SEE NCJ-47295) NCJ047293 242 TION (FROM BRAIN DYSFUNCTION IN N
. PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PREDICTORS AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 1978, BY
OF CRIMINALITY. 2-A DESCRIPTION AUSSELL R MONROE-SEE NCJ·53119) NASSI,A.J.
OF REGISTERED CRIMINALITY IN THE NCJ·53124 11 FROM PHRENOLOGY TO PSYCHOSUR·
HIGH~RISK AND LOW·RISK FAMILIES CRITERION OF DYSCONTROL-A SELF· GERY AND BACK AGAIN BIOLOGICAL
(FROM BIOSQCIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL RATING SCALE (FROM BRAIN DYS- STUDIES OF CRIMINALITY NCJ-45919
Bj;HAVIOR, 1977, BY SARNOFF A MED- FUNCTION IN AGGRESSIVE CRIMINALS, 152

40
Author 'nd." RAPPEPOAT, J. R.

NICOl., A. R. OTTEN,L PODOLSKY, E.


SKIN CONDUCTANCE RECOVERY IN ANTI· COLLOQUIUM ON THE CORRELATES OF CHEMICAL BREW OF CRIMINAL BEHAV·
SOCIAL ADOLESCENTS (FROM BI08O- CRIME AND THE DETERMINANTS OF lOR NCJ·56511 H
CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR-PROCEEDINGS EPILEPTIC MURDERER NCJ·56734
1977, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND NCJ·53454 51 135
KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ· OWEN,D.n. POLNAYA,M.
·47285)· NCJ-47292 281 FORTY·SEVEN, XYV MALE-A REVIEW JUVENILE DELINQUENCY (IN GIRLS)
NIELSEN,J. NCJ·55619 148 NCJ·56938 181
CHILDHOOD OF MALES WITH THE XYV POOLE,E. W.
SYNDROME NCJ·57144 40 CHROMOSOMES OF MALE ?ATlENTS IN II
CORRELATION BETWEEN STATURE, p SECURITY PRISON NCJ·57083
CHARACTER DISORDER AND CRIMI· 47
NALITY NCJ·56769 57 PANNAIN,B. POWER,M.
CRIMINALITY AMONG PATIENTS WITH CRIMINOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY (In CYTOGENIC STUDIES IN A MAXIMUM SE·
KLINEFELTER'S SYNDROME AND THE ItsII6n) NCJ·28446 78 CURITY HOSPITAL NCJ·56888 II
XYVSVNDROME NCJ·56770 71 PARKER, J. B. PRASTKA,G.
INCIDENCE OF CHROMOSOME ABERRA· BRAIN FUNC1l0N IN PROBLEM CHILDREN CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE ORTHO-
TIONS AMONG MALES IN II DANISH AND CONTROLS PSYCHOMETRIC, NEU· MOLECULAR APPROACH PANEL DISo
YOUTH PRISON NCJ·56460· 173 ROLOGICAl, AND CUSSION WITH AUDIENCE PARTICIPA·
LENGTH OF THE V CHROMOSOME IN ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC COM- TION (CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE
CRIMINAL MALES NCJ·56560 PARISONS NCJ·55216 30 ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH CON·
183 PECHADRE,L. FERENCE) NCJ-4oo33 82
PREVALENCE AND A 2 1/2 YEARS INCl· COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SENSITIVITY ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH TO THE
DENCE OF CHROMOSOME ABNOR· TO TOUCH, WEIGHT AND PAIN AMONG THEORY AND TREATMENT OF DRUG
MALITIES AMONG ALL MALES IN A FO- OBSERVATION CENTER MINORS AND AND ALCOHOL ABUSE (CRIME, MALNU-
RENSIC PSYCHIATRIC CLINIC NCJ· VARIOUS GROUPS OF NORMAL TRITION AND THE ORTHOMOLECULAR
56947 235 MINORS, PART 2-FRANCE (In French) APPROACH CONFERENCE)· NCJ·
PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE NCJ·30279 54 40035 222
XYV SYNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S PERSKY,H. PRENTICE, N. M.
SYNDROME IN AN INSTITUTION FOR RELATION OF PSYCHOLOGIC MEASURES INTELl.IGENCE AND DELINQUENCY-A
CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·56296 OF AGGRESSION AND HOSTILITY TO RECONSIDERATION NCJ·56545
238 TESTOSTERONE PRODUCTION IN MAN 177
PREVALENCE OF THE XYV SYNDROME IN NCJ·5B2B9 271 PRICE, W.H.
AN INST~TUTION FOR PSYCHOLOGI· PETERS, G, W. BEHAVIOR DISORDERS AND PATTERN OF
CALLY ABNORMAL CRIMINALS NCJ· RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SELF·REPORT· CRIME AMONG XYV MALES IDENTIFIED
56392 238 ED JUVENILE DELINQUENCY AND AT A MAXIMUM SECURITY HOSPITAL
NIGRO,e. LEARNING DISABILITIES-A PRELIMI· NCJ·57068 t
DIET-VITAMIN PROGRAM FOR JAIL IN· NARY LOOK AT THE DATA NCJ-46417 CRIMINAL PATIENTS WITH xYY SEX·
MATES NCJ·55675 108 273 CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT NCJ·
NURSE,G. T. PFEIFFER, C. C. 58737 ., fI
XXYY MALE PRESENTING WITH AGGRES- BIOCHEMICAL DIAGNOSIS FOR DELlN· FORTY·SEVEN, XYY MALE WITH SPECIAL
SION-A CASE REPORT NCJ·57oo7 QUENT BEHAVIOR (FROM ECOLOGIC- REFERENCE TO BEHf,V10R NCJ·
312 BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO 58807 14.
NUUTlLA,A. TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES-
BRAIN INJURY AND CRIMINALITY-A CRIMINALS, 1976, BY LEONARD J HIPP· HOW STRONG IS THE LINK WITH
RETROSPECTIVE STUDY NCJ·56946 CHEN SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ·50453 CRIME? NCJ·57006 282
31 17 SEX CHROMOSOME ANEUPLOIDY AND
EFFECT OF BRAIN INJURY ON SOCIAL PHILPOTT, W. CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR NCJ·57011l
ADAPTABILITY NCJ·3B02B 123 CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE ORTHO· 214
SPECIFIC READING RETARDATION, .HY· MOLECULAR APPROACH PANEL DIS· SEX DETERMINATION, MENTAL SUBNOR·
PERACTIVJ: CHILD SYNDROME, AND CUSSiON WITH AUDlENCE PARTICIPA· MALlTY, CRIME AND DELINQUENCY IN
JUVENilE DELINQUENCY NCJ·38029 TION (CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE MALES NCJ·57499 _
293 ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH CON·
FERENCE) NCJ-40033 62
PHYSIOLOGY OF VIOLENCE-THE ROLE
o OF CEREBRAL HYPERSENSITIVE REAC-
TION IN AGGRESSION NCJ-40036
Q
O'SRIEN,E. 227 QUINN,M.J.
CYTOGENIC STUDIES IN A MAXIMUM SE· PHILPOTT, W. H. PSYCHOPATHY AND AUTONOMIC CONDI·
CURITY HOSPITAL NCJ·5688B
OKASHA, A.
ea ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF ANTISOCIAL
BEHAVIOR (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIO· TIONING NCJ·55939 2"
PSYCHOSOCIAL AND CHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TRJ:AT-
MENT OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMI·
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC STUD-
IES OF EGYPTIAN MURDERERS NCJ· NALS, 1978, BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN R
56956 265 SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ·50450 118
O'NEILL, M. T. PIROZVNSKI, T. RABKIN,L Y.
PLASMA CATECHOLAMINES, STRESS XYY·SYNDROME-CLINICAL AND BEHAV- PRECURSOR OF DELINQUENCY-THE
AND AGGRESSION IN MAXIMUM SECU· IORAL TYPOLOGY NCJ·57210 HYPERKINETIC DISORDER OF CHIlD-
RITY PATIENTS NCJ·571oo 228 323 HOOD NCJ·56956 231 .
OSBORNE, R. T. . PITCHER, D. R. RADA, R. T. .
DIFFERENTIAL m SYNDROME NCJ·56954 320 PLASMA TESTOSTERONE LEVELS IN THE
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC PAT· PODBOY, J. W. RAPIST NCJ·56730 . 22t
TERNS OF ADOLESCENT MALE PRIS- DIAGNOSIS OF SPECIFIC LEARNING DIS- RAMOS, N. P. . ..
ONERS, A SUMMARY OF THE PRELlMI· ABILITIES IN A JUVENILE DELINQUENT DELINQUENT YOUTH AND LEARNING DIS.
NARY REPORT NCJ·OB961 110 POPULATION NCJ·52114 106 ABILlTIe;S NCJ-4668;l 101
QafERGAARD,O. • LEARNING HANDICAP-THE UNDERDIAG· RAPPEPORT. J. R- . .. . .
CHILDHOOD OF MALES WITH THE xYY NOSEP DISABILITY NCJ·54233 TH~~8 THYROTOXIO QRIMINALS ..~2
SYNDROME NCJ·57144 40 102

41
RASMUSSEN, S. Author Index

RASMUSSEN, S. NEUROENDOCRINE CORRELATES OF SARBIN, T. R.


CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE ORTHO- SEXUAL AND AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR DEMON ISM REVISITED-THE XVZ CHR
MOLECULAR APPROACH PANEL DIS- IN HUMANS NCJ·54019 20G MOSOMAL ANOMALY. NCJ-06 ..
CUSSION WITH AUDIENCE PARTICIPA· ROSECRANS, C. J. 03
TION (CRIME, MALNUTRITION AND THE PRISON SURVEY FOR THE XYV KARYO· SATTERFIELD, J. H.
ORTHOMOLECULAR APPROACH CON· TYPE IN TALL INMATES NCJ·57141 HYPERACTIVE CHILD SYNDR E-A
FERENCE) NCJ-40033 82 230 PRECURSOR OF ADULT YCHOP·
RATTRAY,N. ROSEN,M. ATHY? (FROM PSYCHOPA C BEHAV·
EEG (ELECTqOENCEPHALOGRAM) AND MMPI (MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PER· lOUR-APPROACHES TO RESEARCH,
SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES SONALITY INVENTORy) PROFILES OF 1978, BY R 0 HARE AND 0 SCHALL·
NCJ·55084 110 MALES WITH ABNORMAL SEX CHRO- lNG-SEE NCJ·57500) NCJ.57508
RAZAVI, L MOSOME COMPLEMENTS NCJ·56297 170
CYTOGENETIC AND SOMATIC VARIATION 205 PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY IN THE PRE·
IN THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF VIO- ROSENBERG, R. VENTION OF ANTISOCIAL AND DELIN·
LENCE-EPIDEMIOLOGICAL, CLINICAL EXAMPLE OF BIOSOCIAL INTERACTION QUENT BEHAVIOR NCJ·57137
AND MORPHOGENETIC CONSIDER· RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF so-
ATIONS (FROM NEURAL BASES OF VIO· CIOENVIRONMENTAL AND INDIVIDUAL SCHAWNG,D.
LENCE AND AGGRESSION, 1975, BY W FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI· PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOR-AP·
S FIELDS ET AL-SEE NCJ·57520) NAL BEHAVIOR (FROM BIOSOCIAL PROACHES TO RESEARCH NCJ·
NCJ·57522 88 BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, BY S A 57500 252
REED,F.S. MEDNICK... -SEE NCJ-47285) NCJ· SCHAUss, A. G.
SURVEY OF Y CHROMOSOME VARIANTS 47286 142 DIFFERENTIAL OUTCOMES AMONG MIS-
AND PERSONALITY IN 438 BORSTAL ROSENTHAL, D. DEMEANANT PROBATIONERS
LADS AND 254 CONTROLS NCJ·38244 HEREDITY IN CRIMINALITY NCJ·27204 THROUGH THE USE OF ORTHOMOLE·
298 185 CULAR APPROACHES AND CASE·
REICH, T. LACK OF ASSOCIATION BETWEEN DE· WORK/COUNSELING NCJ·54024
GENETIC ·ENVIRONME~!TAL INTERAC- FECTIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY 111
TIONS AND ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOUR OF HERPESVIRUS HOM IN IS NCJ· ORTHOMOLECULAR TREATMENT OF
(FROM PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAVIOUR- 57105 184 CRIMINAL OFFENDERS NCJ·54018
APPROACHES TO RESEARCH, 1978, BY ROTH,LH. 224
R 0 HARE AND 0 SCHALLING-SEE BIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGI· SCHELLHARDT, T. D.
NCJ·57500) NCJ·57504 157 CAL FACTORS IN CRIMINALITY (FROM CAN CHOCOLATE TURN YOU INTO II
IMPLICATIONS OF SEX DIFFERENCES IN HANDBOOK OF CRIMINOLOGY, 1974, CRIMINAL? SOME EXPERTS SAY so
THE PREVALENCES OF ANTISOCIAL BY DANIEL GLASER SEE NCJ·16486) NCJ·57069 33
PERSONALITY, ALCOHOLISM, AND NCJ-49444 19 SCHULSINGER, f.
CRIMINALITY FOR FAMILIAL TRANSMIS· ROTHSCHILD, G. H. CRIMINALITY IN XYY AND xxv MEN
SION NCJ·55499 172 TREATMENT OF YOUNG DELINQUENT NCJ·36253 75
AEID,W.H. BOYS WITH DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN EXAMPLE OF 810SOCIAL INTERACTION
GENETIC CORRELATES OF ANTISOCIAL SODIUM AND METHYPHENIDATE RESEARCH·THE INTERPLAY OF SO-
SYNDROMES (FROM PSYCHOPATH-A NCJ·55091 304 CIOENVIRONMENTAI. AND INDIVIDUAL
COMPREHENSIVE STUDY OF ANTISO· ROWBOTHAM, B. M. FACTORS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF CRIMI·
CIAL DISORDERS AND BEHAVIC'RS, NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF NAL BEHAVIOR (FROM BIOSOCIAL
19'/'8. BY WILLIAM H REID-SEE IICJ· NORMAL BOYS, DELINQUENT BOYS, BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, BY S A
57510) NCJ·57516 158 AND BOYS WITH LEARNING PROBLEMS MEDNICK... -SEE NCJ-47285) NCJ·
PSYCHOPATH-A COMPREHENH!VE NCJ·56593 217 47286 142
STUDY OF ANTISOCIAL DISO~:lERS RUBIN,J. GENETICS, ENVIRONMENT AND PSY\':HO-
AND BEHAVIORS NCJ·57510 250 PATHOLOGY NCJ-47446 180
NEUROLOGIC FINDINGS IN RECIDIVIST
RICH, W.D. AGGRESSORS (FROM l'SYCHOPATHOL· XYV AND xxvMEN-CRIMINALITY I\ND
AGGRESSION (FROM . BIOSOC)IAL
SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE LINK BE· OGY AND BRAIN DYSFUNCTION. 1977,
BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 1977,
TWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES AND BY RUSSELL R MONROE ET AL) NCJ·
BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND KAF IL 0
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY NCJ·50951 571e8 211
CHRISTIANSEN -SEE NCJ-4i 285)
201 NEUROPSYCHIATRIC CORRELATIONS NCJ-47291 313
RICHARDS, B. W. WITH ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR NCJ· SCHWARTZ,L
PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL IN· 39871 213
TREATMENT OF YOUNG DELINQUENT
VESTIGATION OF XYV PRISONERS RUCCI,A.J. BOYS WITH DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN
NCJ·56891 248 XYV SURVEY IN AN INSTITUTION FOR SODIUM AND METHYPHENIDATE
RICHARDSON, C. E. SEX OFFENDERS AND THE MENTALLY NCJ·55091 304
CHROMOSOME ERRORS IN MEN WITH ILL NCJ·57013 319 SCOTT,G.D.
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR COMPARISON CHROMOSOMAL STUDIES OF PRISON IN·
OF SELECTED MEN WITH KLINE·
FELTER'S SYNDROME AND XYV CHRO·
MOSOME PATTERN NCJ·54106
s MATES WITH RELATIONSHIP TO OF·
FENCE CHARACTERISTICS NCJ·56733
43
44 SACHDEV, K. SCOTT,LW.
RIZZO,N.D. BEHAVIOR DISORDERS OF CHILDHOOD , SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIOR IN I<LINE·
DYSLEXIA AND DELINQUENCY -A NEW AND THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM FELTER'S SYNDROME IIIQJ·55217
DYSLEXIA SCREENING TEST NCJ· NCJ·55251 10 217
29460 113 SACHS, J. SCOTT,P.D.
ROMANO,D. PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE M: !DICAL ASPECTS OF DELINQUENCY
PAEVALENCE OF THE XYV SYNDROME IN XYV SYNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S NCJ·57497 1M
AN INSTITUTION FOR PSYCHOLOGI· SYNDROME IN AN INSTITUTION FOR SCRIPCARU, G.
CALLY ABNORMAL CRIMINALS NCJ· CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·56296 XYV·SYNDROME-CLINICAL AND BEHAV·
58392 238 238 10R~L TYPOLOGY NCJ·57210
ftQ!)£, R. M. SADEK,A. 323
ASSESSMENT CI" AGGRESSIVE BEHAV· PSYCHOSOCIAL AND' SEGAL, B.S.
lOR AND PLASMA TESTOSTERONE IN A ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC STUD- RETARDED READERS AND ANTI-SOCIAL
YOUNG CRIMINAL POPULATION NCJ· IES OF EGYPTIAN MURDERERS NCJ· YOUNG PEOPLE-AN ENGLISH STUDY
57186 8 56956 285 NCJ·13112 277

42
Author Index TRAINOR, M. L

SEus,8.a. SIEGAL, A. W. CALLY ABNORMAL CRIMINALS NCJ-


PREDICTION OF POLICE INCIDENTS AND ADAPTIVE AND LEARNING SKILLS IN JU- 56392 238
ACCIDENTS BY METEOROLOGICAL VENILE DEllNQUENTS-A NEUROPSY- STUlTE,H.
VAFUABLES NCJ-19425 233 CHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS NCJ-55811 FOLLOW-UP STUDIES OF JUVENILE VIO-
SELOSSE,J. 3 LENT OFFENDERS-WEST GERMANY
FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES OF THE ELEC- SlNGH,N. (In German) NCJ-39348 148
TROENCEPHALOGRAM AMONG SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES SUTHERLAND. G. R•.
NOAMAL, PSYCHONEUROTIC OR DE· AND CRIME NCJ-56695 281 CHROMOSOME SURVEY OF PERSONS
L1NQUENT ADOLESCENTS AN ATTEMPT a
SLAUGHTER, A. CHARGED WITH MURDER NCJ-1440B
AT DIFFERENTIAL CLASSIFICATION BY PSYCHOEDUCATIOHAL DIAGNOSTIC 45
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS-FRANCE (In SERV:CES FOR LEARNING DISABLED SWEET,W.H•
. French) NCJ-30265 154 YOUTHS-RESEARCH PROCEDURES NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG·
SENDI,I.B. NCJ-4fJ418 247 GRESSION NCJ-57520 207
COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PREDICTIVE SLAVIH, S. H.
CRITERIA IN THE PREDISPOSlTION OF INFORMATION PROCESSING DEFECTS IN
HOMICIDAL
57166
ADOLESCENTS NCJ·
53
DELINQUENTS (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIO-
CHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREAT-
T
SENo,C. T. MENT OF DELINQUENTS AND CRIMI- TARNOPOL, t..
SEX CHROMOSOME ABNORMALITIES NALS, 1978, BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN DELINQUENCY AND LEARNING DISABIL-
AND CRIME Nc;J.~95 281 SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ-50449 176 ITIES (FROM LEARNING DISABILITIES-
SETHI, B. B. SMAIJ.,J.G. INTRODUCTION TO EDUCATION AND
BUCCAL SMEAR AND DERMATOGLYPHIC ORGANIC DIMENSION OF CRIME NCJ- MEDICAL MANAGEMENT, BY LESTER
STUDIES IN ~UVENILE DELINQUENCY 55823 221 TARNOPOL) NCJ·57530 93
NCJ-57143 32 SMmt, K.D. DELINQUENCY AND MINIMAL BRAIN DYS-
RELATION OF PSYCHOLOGIC MEASURES FUNCTION NCJ-57009 84
SETHI,N. OF AGGRESSION AND HOSTILITY TO
BUCCAL SMEAR AND DERMATOGLYPHIC TAUB,S.
TESTOSTERONE PRODUCTION IN MAN NOSOLOGY OF VIOLENCE (FROM
STUDIES IN JUVENILE DELINQUENCY NCJ-56289 271
NCJ.57143 32 NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AG·
SNELL, t.. GRESSION. 1975, BY W F FIELDS AND
SEVER,J.t.. DELINQUENCY, PARENTAL PSYCHO- W A SWEET -SEE NCJ-57520) NCJ·
LACK OF ASSOCIATION BElWEEN DE· PATHOLOGY, AND PARENTAL CRIMI· 57524 220
FECTIVE DELINQUENTS AND ANTIBODY NALITY -CLINICAL AND EPIDEMIOLOG· TAYLOR, T.
OF HERPESVIRUS HOMINIS NCJ- ICAl FINDINGS NCJ·56687 88 RELATION OF DEVIANT SYMPTOMS AND
57105 184 SOIiASUNDARAM,O BEHAVIOR IN A NORMAL POPULATION ,!
SHAH, S. A. JUVENILE DELINQUENCY (IN GIRLS) TO SUBSEQUENT DELINQUENCY AND
BIOLOGICAL AND PS'I'CHOPHYSIOLOGI- NCJ-5693B 181 MALADJUSTMENT NCJ.5744&
CAL FACTORS IN CRIMINALITY (FROM SOUDEK,D. 270
HANDBOOK OF CRIMINOLOGY, 1974, LONGER Y CHROMOSOME IN CRIMINALS TELFER, M. A.
BY DANIEL GLASER SEE NCJ·16466) NCJ-571B7 197 CI-lROMOSOME ERRORS IN MEN WITH
NCJ-49444 ' 18 SPECK,t..B. ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR COMPARISON
FORTY-SEVEN, XYY CHROMOSOMAL AB- VISUAL EVOKED RESPONSE AND FRE- OF SELECTED MEN WITH KLINE·
NORMALITY-A CRITICAL APPRAISAL QUENCY DENSITY SPECTRA OF PRIS· FELTER'S SYNDROME AND XYY CHRQ..
WITH RESPECT TO ANTISOCIAL AND ONER·PATIENTS NCJ·57185 309 MOSOME PATIERN NCJ·54106
VIOLENT BEHAVIOR (FROM ISSUES IN SPELLACY, F. 44
BRAIN/BEHAVIOR CONTROL, 1967, BY NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL DISCRIMINA· MMPI (MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PER-
W L SMITH AND A KLINE-SEE NCJ- TION BElWEEN VIOLENT AND NONVIO- SONALITY. INVENTORY) PROFILES OF
57467) NCJ-57469 147 LENT MEN NCJ·55726 216 MALES WITH ABNORMAL SEX CHRO-
XYV CHROMOSOME MALE-OR SYN· STANWOOD, C. MOSOME COMPLEMENTS NCJ-56207
DROME? (FROM MEDICAL GENETICS, V RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE NCJ·16313 205
10, 1974, BY ARTHUR G STEINBERG 278 TEN"ENT, T. G.
AND ALEXANDER G BEARN) NCJ- STEINBERGER, H. EEG (ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM) AND
55848 318 TEST OF A THEORY OF DELINQUENCY- SEX CHROMOSOME .ABNORMALITIES
SHANOK, S. S. 'DELINQUENT' .BEHAVIORS AMONG IN- NCJ·55084 UI
DELINQUENCY, PARENTAL PSYCHO· STITUTIONALIZED DRUG AODICTS AS A TEOOORESCY, F.
PATHOLOGY, AND PARENTAL CRIMI- FUNCTION OF AROUSAL AND THE SEN- XYV-SYNDAOME-CLINICAL AND BEHAV·
NALITY -CLINICAL AND EPIDEMIOLOG- SATlON·SEEKING MOTIVE NCJ·56150 10RAL TYPOLOGY NCJ·57210
ICAL FINDINGS NCJ·56687 M_ :;00 323
MEOICAL ,.HISTORIES OF DELINQUENT STEVENS, J. R. THEILGAARD, A.
AND NONDELINQUENT CHILDREN-AN BEHAVIOR DISORDERS OF CHILDHOOD REPORT OF SEX CHROMOSOME ABNOR-
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDY NCJ·57084 AND THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM MALITIES IN MENTALLY RETARDED
_____ 1.8.9_ NCJ.5521.i1 10 MALE OFFENDERS INCLUDING A PSY·
SHAPIRO,A. STEWART CHOLOGICAL STVDY OF PATIENTS
DELINQUENT AND DISTURBED BEHAVIOR PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL IN· WITH XVV AND XXYY KAAYOTYPES
WITHIN THE FIELD OF MENTAL DEFI· VESTIGATION OF XYY PRISONEAS NCJ·56389 276
CIENCY NCJ·57011 89 NC.J.56891 248 THOMPSON; H.
(f(l'l.~IN, C. R, STONE, A. XYV SURVEY IN AN INSTITUTION FOR
HQMICIDES AND THE LUNAR CYCLE- TREATMENT OF YOUNG DELINQUENT SEX OFFENDERS AND THE MENTALLY
TOWARO A THEORY OF LUNAR INFLU- BOYS WITH DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN ILL NCJ-570t3 31t
ENCe ON .HUMAN EMOTIONAL DIS- SODIUM AND METHYPHENIDATE Tf'IORVALDsotII, 8. It.
TURBANCe NCJ·26028 108 NCJ.550\)1 304 PSYCHOPATHY AND RESPONSE TO
SIDDLE, D. A. T. STRONG, J. A. ELECTRICAL STIMULATION NCJ.
SKIN CONDUCTANCE RECOVERY IN ANTI· CRIMINAL PATIENTS WITH XYY' SEX· 55822 $
SOCIAL ADOLESCENTS (FROM .BIOSO- CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT NCJ- TRAINOR, M. L.
CIAL BASES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, 58737 a8 PSYCHOEOUCATIONAL DIAGNOSTIC I
1971, BY SARNOFF A MEDNICK AND STURUP,G. SERVICeS FOR LEARNING DISABLED.
KARL 0 CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ- PREVALENCE OF THE XYV SYNDROME IN . YOllTHS:':':"FlESEARCH PROCEDURes
47285) NCJ-47292 211 AN IN$nTUTION FOR PSYCHOLOGI. NCJ-48418 247

43
.
,
_ ~Sf

,
",
TRASLER, G. Author- Index

TRASLER,G. SPECIFIC READING RETARDATION. HY· WILDER, J.


RELATIONS BETWEEN PSYCHOPATHY PERACTIVE CHILD SYNDROME. AND PROBLEMS OF CRIMiNAL PSYCHOLOGY
AND PERSISTENT CRIMINALlTY- JUVENILE DELINQUENCY NCJ·36029 RELATED TO HYPOGLYCEMIC STATES
METHODOLOGICAL AND THEORETICAL 293 NCJ·56771 240
ISSUES (FROM. PSYCHOPATHIC BEHAV· WILE8,P.
lOUR-APPROACHES TO RESEARCH. RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE NCJ·163
1978. BY R D HARE AND 0 SCHALL· 8
lNG-SEE NCJ·57500) NCJ·57505 WILL, D. P. , JR
272 . WACKER, J. A- PREDICTION OF POLICE INCIDEN
mAVILL, A- A- REDUCTION OF CRIME THRU THE PRE· ACCIDENTS BY METEORO
CHROMOSOMAL STUDIES OF PRISON IN· VENTION AND TREATMENT OF LEARN· VARIABLES NCJ·19425
MATES WITH RELATIONSHIP TO OF· ING DISABILITIES NCJ·16375 268 WILLIAMS, D.
FENCE CHARACTf;RISTICS NCJ·56733 WADSWORTH, M. E. J. STUDIES OF PERSONS CONFINED FOR
43 DELINQUENCY. PULSE RATES AND CRIMES OF VIOLENCE (FROM NEURAL
TSENGHI,C; EARLY EMOTIONAL DEPRIVATION BASES OF VIOLENCE AND AGGRES·
XYY SYNDROME IN YOUNG GREEK DE· NCJ·36245 911 SION, 1975. BY W S FIELDS AND W H
TA!NEES NCJ·U6897 324 WAHLSTROM, J. SWEET -SEE NCJ·57520) NCJ·57523
TSUBOI,T. LENGTH OF THE Y-CHROMOSOMES IN 295
CORRELATION BETWEEN STATURE. MEN EXAMINED BY FORENSIC PSYCHI· WITKIN. H. A-
CHARACTER DISORDER AND CRIMI· ATRISTS NCJ·57165 1M CRIMINALITY IN XYY AND XXY MEN
NALITY NCJ·56769 57 WALTER, R. NCJ·36253 75
CRIMINO·BIOLOGIC STUDY OF PATIENTS FOLLOW·UP STUDIES OF JUVENILE VIO- XYY AND xxv MEN-CRIMINALITY AND
WITH THE XYY SYNDROME AND KLINE· LENT OFFENDERS-WEST GERMANY AGGRESSION {FROM BIOSOCIAL
FELTER'S SYNDROME NCJ·57005 (In German) NCJ·39348 146 BJ\SES Of' CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR. 1977.
76 WARE,M.E. BV SAFlINOFF A MEDNICK AND KARL 0
PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE SOME EFFECTS OF NICOTINIC AND CHRISTIANSEN-SEE NCJ-47285)
XYY SYNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S ASCORBIC ACIDS ON THE BEHAVIOR NOJ-47291 313
SYNDROME IN AN INSTITUTION FOR OF INSTITUTIONALIZED JUVENILE DE· WOLF,P.H.
CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·56296 L1NQUENTS (FROM ECOLOGIC·BIO- NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF
236 CHEMICAL APPROACHES TO TREAT· NORMAL BOYS. DELINQUENT BOYS.
PREVALENCE OF THE XVY SYNDROME IN MENT OF DELINQUENTS.... 1978. BY L J AND BOYS WITH LEARNING PROBLEMS
AN INSTITUTION FOR PSYCHOLOGI· HIPPCHEN-SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ· NCJ·56593 217
CALLY ABNORMAL CRIMINALS NCJ· 50452 289 WOLFGANG, M. E.
58392 238 WATT,D.C. DELINQUENCY AND VIOLENCE, FROM
TUVER, B. RELATION OF DEVIANT SYMPTOMS AND THE VIEWPOINT OF CRIMINOLOGY
PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE OF THE BEHAVIOR IN A NORMAL POPULATION (FROM NEURAL BASES OF VIOLENCE
XVY SYNDROME AND KLINEFELTER'S TO SUBSEQUENT DELINQUENCY AND AND AGGRESSION. 1975, BY W S
SYNDROME IN AN INSTITUTION FOR MALADJUSTMENT NCJ·57446 FIELDS AND W H SWEET -SEE NCJ·
CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHS NCJ·56296 270 57520) NCJ·57528 95
236 WAX,D. WONG,S.
ENURESIS. FIRE SETTING. AND ANIMAL VISION ANALYSIS AND REFRACTIVE
STATUS OF YOUTHS IN A JUVENILE
u CRUELTY IN MALE ADOLESCENT DE·
L1NQUENTS-A TRIAD PREDICTIVE OF
VIOLENT BEHAVIOR NCJ·55406
DETENTION HOME POPULATION NCJ·
5e393 307
UNDERWOOD, R. 127 WOODMAN, D. D.
LEARNING DISABILITY AS A PREDISPOS· WELCH,J. P. PLASMA CATECHOLAMINES. STRESS
ING CAUSE OF CRIMINALITY NCJ· XYY SYNDROME-A GENETIC DETERMI· AND AGGRf:SSI':lN IN MAXIMUM SECU·
56559 190 NANT OF BEHAVIOR NCJ·57067 RITY PATIENTS NCJ·57100 228
UNGER, K. V. 322 WUNDERLICH, n C.
LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE WELCH,S. NEUAOALLERGY AS A CONTRIBUTING
DELINQUENCY NCJ·46082 106 CROWDING AND CIVIL DISORDER-AN FACTOR TO SOCIAl. MISFITS DIAGNO·
UNGER,W.M. EXAMINATION OF COMPARATIVE NA· SIS AND TRE.~TMr:NT (FROM ECOLO·
FORTY·SEVEN. XYY SYNDROME. HEIGHT TIONAL AND CITY DATA NCJ·37710 GIC-BIOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO
AND INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF JUVE· 84 TREATMENT OF DELINQUENTS AND
NILE DELINQUENTS NCJ·57016 CROWDING AND URBAN CRIME RATES CRIMINALS. 1978. BY LEONARD J HIPP·
150 NCJ·36637 85 CHEN-SEE NCJ·50444) NCJ·50454
WEST,D.J. • 208

v RESEARCH ON, VIOLENCE NCJ·16313

WHATMORE, P. B.
278
y
I'
j

VANASEK, F. BEHAVIOR DISORDERS AND PATTERN OF


XVV SURVEY IN AN INSTITUTION FOR CRIME AMONG XVY MALES IDENTIFIED YARYURA~TOBIAS, J. A-
SEX OFFENDERS AND THE MENTALLY AT A MAXIMUM SECURITY HOSPITAL BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH oN VIOLENT BE·
ILL NCJ·57013 319 NCJ·57068 9 HAVIOR (FROM ECOLOGIC-BIOCHEMI·
VERDEAUX, G. CRIMINAL PATIENTS WITH XYY SEX· CAL APPROACHES TO TREATMENT OF
FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES OF THE ELEC· CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT NCJ· DELINQUENTS AND CRIMINALS. 1978.
TROENCEPHALOGRAM AMONG 56737 6a BY LEONARD J HIPPCHEN SEE' NCJ·
NORMAL, PSYCHONEUROTIC OR DE· WIENER, J. M. 50444) NCJ·50451 21
LlNQUENT ADOLESCENTS AN ATIEMPT EEG(ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM)STUDY YEUDALL, L T.
AT DIFFERENTIAL CLASSIFICATION BY OF. DELINQUENT AND NONDELlN· NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CORRELATES
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS-FRANCE (In QUENT ADOLESCENTS NCJ·56738 OF CRIMINAL PSYCHOPA'fH. PART 2-
French) NCJ;30265 154 121 DIS~RIMINATION AND PREDICTION OF
VIRKKUNEN, M. WIKLER,A. , DANGEROUS AND RECIDIVISTIC OF·
BRAIN INJURY AND CRIMINALITY-A BRAIN FUNCTION IN PROBLEM CHILDREN FENDERS (FROM HUMAN AGGRESSION
RETROSPECTIVE STUDY NCJ·56946 AND CONTROLS PSYCHOMETRIC. NEU· AND DANGEROUSNESS-SEE NCJ·
31 ROLOGICAt. AND 57464) NCJ·57489 214
EFFECT OF BRAIN INJURY ON SOCIAL ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC COM· NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CORflELATES
ADAPTABILITY NCJ·36026 123 PARISONS NCJ·55216 30 OF CRIMINAL PSYCHOPATHY, PART 1-

44
,',', "

,
, '.'J
t ':.- .. " .....~-.>.._ •..!:.." "+ .+J..:t~d '~.:,~ "\,'''. _ .'
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS (FROM
HUMAN AGGRESSION AND DANGER·
OUSNESS, 1978, BY D LABERGE·ALT·
MEJD-SEE NCJ·57484) NCJ·57488
215
YOSHIMASU, S.
CRIMINAL LIFE CURVES OF MONOZYGO-
TIC TWIN·PAIRS NCJ·55252 67
CRIMINOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE
FAMILY IN THE LIGHT OF THE STUDIES
OF CRIMINAL TWINS NCJ·55311
79

z
ZABA,J. N.
LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE
DELINQUENCY' NCJ·50338 187
ZAREMBA,J. .-
PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL IN·
VESTIGATION OF XYY PRI~ONERS
NCJ.56891 248
ZEUTHEN,E.
CHILDHOOD OF MALES WITH THE XYV
SYNDROME NCJ·57144 40
ZIMMERMAN, J.
ESTABLISHING AN OPERATIONAL DEFINI·
TION OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
NCJ·46419 139
AELATllNSHIP BETWEEN SELF·REPORT·
ED JUVENILE DELINQUENCY AND
LEARNING DISABILITIES-A PRELlMI·
NARY LOOK AT THE DATA NCJ-46417
273
SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE LINK BE·
TWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES AND
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY NCJ·50951
291
ZINKUS, p. W.
LEARNING DISABILITIES AND JUVENILE
DELINQUENCY NCJ·56546 188

* u.s. GOVERHMEIIT PRINTING OfFICE. In9-0-311-379 (1700)

45

-.',
DEFINmVE BIBLIOGIt\PHY
The Etiology of Criminality:
Nonbehavioral Science Perspectives
READER SURVEY

To help NCJRS evaluate the usefulness of, the Definitive Bibliography series,
please complete this questionnaire and return it to NCJRS. This question-
naire is designed to be detached from the book, folded, stapled, and mailed.
Postage is prepaid.
Directions; Please circle the number next to the most appropriate an-
swer to each question. Circle ~ number only.
1. How do you rate the overall quality of the bibliography?

1. Excellent 2. Good 3. Satisfactory 4. Poor


2. How useful is the bibliography to you?
1. Very useful 2. Of some use 3. Not useful

3. Do you think this bibliography provides complete coverage of its topic?

1. Yes, it is complete. 3. No, it i8 not complete.


2. It is somewhat complete.
Please rate the bibliography's design (readability, typeface, etc.);

1
"
5.
1. E:I(cellent 2. Good 3. Satisfactory
Please rate the information in the citations.
4. Poor

1. Excellent 2. Good 3. Satisfactory 4. Poor


6. Did you find the indexes helpful?
1. Yes, very helpful 2. Somewhat helpful 3. No, not very helpful
7. If you have used previous NCJRS bibliographiea, how would you compare
this one with those?
1. This one is more useful. 3. No different to me.
2. This one is somewhat more useful. 4. This one is not as useful to me.
8. If you have a comment on the difference between this type of bibliography
and previous ones, please comment here.

9. Were you able to loc&te or order publications from the bibliography?


1. Yes 2. Some 3. No

['.t,
."
"
" .. 1. . -=e"+ , ;

10. please suggest one topic of primary interest to you for a future def-
initive bibliography.

1.1. If you have a comment on the choice of topic of this bibliography,


please comment here:

12. What recommendations do you have for future definitive bibliographies?

13. Would yuu order another definitive bibliography?


1. Yes 2. Maybe 3. No

14. What type of organization do you work for?


1. Police 5. University. college, teaching
2. Parole/probation/corrections 6. Nonprofit, volunteer, treatment
3. Courts centers
,
4. Government, other than above 7. Private company
(LEAA, legislature, etc.) 8. Other
-------------------- .......
Q)
....
~
~

15. Which State (or country) do you wor~ in?_________________ iii


~ _________ ~____________________ ~_______________________ N _____________
___________ • ____________________________
(fold) (fold) ~
t:l\

~
6
NO POSTAGE I1S ;

111111 NECESSARY
IF MAILED
IN THE
.jJ

~
:::s
~Il

I"
, ,

UNITED STATES 1
I

J
BUSINESS REPLY MAIL ~\
FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO. 168 ROCKVILLE, MD

POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE ~I


~
mk.
National Criminal Justice
Reference Service
Survey Department
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20850

i
'",., h'" ). I
'"

..
;;: '
I
,,',"

.'

"

',:.,.-:.' '"f."

You might also like