Scientists Map Psychological Signature of People with Extremist Tendencies

Bikes are seen outside Cambridge University, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, Cambridge, Britain, April 1, 2020. (Reuters)
Bikes are seen outside Cambridge University, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, Cambridge, Britain, April 1, 2020. (Reuters)
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Scientists Map Psychological Signature of People with Extremist Tendencies

Bikes are seen outside Cambridge University, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, Cambridge, Britain, April 1, 2020. (Reuters)
Bikes are seen outside Cambridge University, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, Cambridge, Britain, April 1, 2020. (Reuters)

Researchers at the University of Cambridge have mapped an underlying "psychological signature" for people who are predisposed to holding extreme social, political or religious attitudes, and support violence in the name of ideology.

Approaches to radicalization policy mainly rely on basic demographic information such as age, race and gender. By adding cognitive and personality assessments, the psychologists created a statistical model that is between four and fifteen times more powerful at predicting ideological worldviews than demographics alone. Scientists believe this model could be a psychological signature that helps identify people with extremist tendencies.

The researchers conducted a series of follow-up tests on 334 of the original participants, using a further 16 surveys to determine attitudes and strength of feeling towards various ideologies. They created a model including a mix of personality traits and mental characteristics such as poorer working memory and slower “perceptual strategies” - the unconscious processing of changing stimuli, such as shape and color - as well as tendencies towards impulsivity and sensation seeking. The results were published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society on February 22.

Psychologists found that conservatism is linked to cognitive “caution”: slow-and-accurate unconscious decision-making, compared to the fast-and-imprecise "perceptual strategies" found in more liberal minds.

They also found that brains of more dogmatic people are slower to process perceptual evidence, but they are more impulsive personality-wise.

Researchers say that, while still in early stages, this research could help to better identify and support people most vulnerable to radicalization across the political and religious spectrum.

“Subtle difficulties with complex mental processing may subconsciously push people towards extreme doctrines that provide clearer, more defined explanations of the world, making them susceptible to toxic forms of dogmatic and authoritarian ideologies. We are interested in the role that hidden cognitive functions play in sculpting ideological thinking. We think our study will be useful in this context,” said Dr. Leor Zmigrod, lead author from Cambridge's Department of Psychology in a report on the university's website.



Tokyo Hospital Opens City's First 'Baby Hatch'

People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
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Tokyo Hospital Opens City's First 'Baby Hatch'

People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)

A Tokyo hospital on Monday became the Japanese capital's first medical institution to offer a system allowing the safe, anonymous drop-off of infants by parents unable to raise them.

Used for centuries globally, so-called baby boxes or baby hatches are meant to prevent child abandonment or abuse.

But they have been criticized for violating a child's right to know their parents, and are also sometimes described by anti-abortion activists as a solution for desperate mothers.

Newborns within four weeks of age can now be placed in a basket in a quiet room with a discreet entrance at a hospital in Tokyo run by the Christian foundation Sanikukai, AFP reported.

The scheme, open 24 hours a day, is meant to be an "emergency, last-resort measure" to save babies' lives, Hitoshi Kato, head of Sanikukai Hospital, told a news conference.

There are still "mothers and babies with nowhere to go", the hospital said in a statement, citing the "abandonment of infants in baggage lockers, parks or beaches".

Sanikukai is only Japan's second medical institution to open a baby hatch, after the Catholic-run Jikei hospital in southwestern Japan's Kumamoto region opened one in 2007.

At Sanikukai in Tokyo, when a baby is put in the basket, a motion sensor immediately alerts hospital staffers to the drop-off, sending them rushing downstairs to tend to the baby, project leader Hiroshi Oe told AFP.

After confirming the baby's safety, the hospital will work with authorities to help decide the "best possible" next step, including foster care or a children's home.

If the person leaving the baby is seen lingering around the hospital, efforts will be made to engage them, Oe said.