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Translate Hare Psychopathy Checklist (Original) (PCL-22)


Original Title

Hare Psychopathy Checklist (Original) (PCL-22)

Translated Title
Background

The Hare Psychopathy Checklist (Original) (PCL-22) is one of the most influential clinical instruments developed for assessing psychopathic personality traits, antisocial behavior patterns, emotional detachment, and interpersonal manipulation. The checklist was originally developed by Dr. Robert D. Hare during the late 1970s and early 1980s as part of clinical and forensic psychopathy research. The original version contained 22 items before later revisions resulted in the widely known PCL-R. The assessment evaluates interpersonal style, emotional functioning, impulsivity, antisocial tendencies, behavioral instability, criminal versatility, and social deviance commonly associated with psychopathic personality characteristics.

Procedure

This assessment is designed to evaluate long-term personality patterns, interpersonal behavior, emotional functioning, behavioral regulation, and antisocial tendencies. Participants or evaluators select the response option that best reflects the presence or absence of each psychopathy-related characteristic or behavioral pattern. The assessment focuses on interpersonal manipulation, emotional detachment, impulsivity, behavioral instability, antisocial tendencies, irresponsibility, and chronic social deviance.

Participation

This assessment is intended for educational, screening, and research purposes only. Results should not be considered a clinical diagnosis or substitute for professional psychological, psychiatric, forensic, or legal evaluation. Psychopathy-related assessments should be interpreted cautiously and within appropriate clinical, ethical, and professional contexts.

Scoring

Responses are scored according to the degree to which psychopathic personality traits, antisocial tendencies, emotional detachment, and behavioral instability are present.

The PCL-22 traditionally uses:
- 2 = Definitely Present
- 1 = Possibly Present
- 0 = Definitely Absent
Higher scores generally indicate stronger psychopathic personality characteristics, interpersonal manipulation tendencies, emotional detachment, impulsivity, antisocial behavior, and behavioral instability.

The checklist is commonly used within forensic and clinical contexts for psychopathy research and personality assessment.

Questions

Question 1

Glibness / superficial charm

Question 2

Previous diagnosis as psychopath (or similar)

Question 3

Egocentricity / grandiose sense of self-worth

Question 4

Proneness to boredom / low frustration tolerance

Question 5

Pathological lying and deception

Question 6

Conning / lack of sincerity

Question 7

Lack of remorse or guilt

Question 8

Lack of affect and emotional depth

Question 9

Callous / lack of empathy

Question 10

Parasitic lifestyle

Question 11

Short-tempered / poor behavioral controls

Question 12

Promiscuous sexual relations

Question 13

Early behavior problems

Question 14

Lack of realistic, long-term plans

Question 15

Impulsivity

Question 16

Irresponsible behavior as parent

Question 17

Frequent marital relationships

Question 18

Juvenile delinquency

Question 19

Poor probation or parole risk

Question 20

Failure to accept responsibility for own actions

Question 21

Many types of offense

Question 22

Drug or alcohol abuse not direct cause of antisocial behavior

Translator Information

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