30 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2018
    1. By a process of data aggregating, the algorithm gathers killings that are related by method, place, and time, and by the victim’s sex. It also considers whether the rate of unsolved murders in a city is notable, since an uncaught serial killer upends a police department’s percentages.

      data aggregating can show killers MOs and link them to certain murders. this could also show how serial killers are alike.

    1. From Godwins investigation he found that nearly ninety percent of victims were complete strangers to the killer and that only three percent were friends and one percent were that of family members (Fox 105). This explains why serial killers are able to get away with the massacres for so incredibly long.

      very important to understand because there are a lot of people who think that serial kills out of a vendetta against a person.

    2. "A psychokiller, I should make clear, is not a regular murderer. A murderer has a vendetta, a nice specific personal thing against his victim" (Corin 188). Unlike that of a normal homicide, serial killers are only driven by instinct and a desire to kill. Due to these sexual desires and the need to fulfill their arousing fantasies it often drives these individual to murder those who are complete strangers.

      most of the time, serial killers aren't looking to kill. they are looking to fill their desires. they usually isn't a motive against the person that is being killed/raped. a murder has a vendetta (a personal thing agasint this one person. serial killers are only driven by insticnct and a desire to kill.

    3. he murdered not in anger, revenge, or financial enrichment but on impulse and desire

      Is there another reason (other than impulse and desire) that people kill. Is there an argument that people kill due to anger, revenger, ect.

    1. Clinical trials on disorders other than schizophrenia have found ECT to be effective in depression, mania, delusional states and catatonia—in the elderly and in adolescents as well as adults—and it can be safely applied to patients with severe physical illnesses.

      helped in all these different situations

    2. Except for his slow and regular breathing, he appeared lifeless. He had hardly spoken or cared for himself in more than four years. His mental condition of catatonic schizophrenia was considered hopeless.

      if it can help someone who barely cared for themselves in over 4 years than it can change the brain chemistry of a serial killer

    3. n addition, the use of psychotropic drugs developed in the 1950s and 1960s began to displace electroshock because they were much less expensive and had fewer immediate risks.

      Electroconvulsive therapy= expensive and has a lot of risks

    4. Studies have shown electroshock treatment, now known as electroconvulsive therapy, to be an effective treatment for depression, mania, delusional states, and catatonia in adolescents and adults, including the elderly.

      Could electroconvulsive therapy change the brain chemistry of a person with tendencies like those of a serial killer or have the same brain chemistry as a serial killer?

    1. They believe that brain patterns and genetic makeup are not enough to make anyone a psychopath. You need a third ingredient: abuse or violence in one's childhood.

      the third ingredient is very important because of how the kids are treated as young people during their formative years.

    2. He looked at 12 genes related to aggression and violence and zeroed in on the MAO-A gene (monoamine oxidase A). This gene, which has been the target of considerable research, is also known as the "warrior gene" because it regulates serotonin in the brain. Serotonin affects your mood — think Prozac — and many scientists believe that if you have a certain version of the warrior gene, your brain won't respond to the calming effects of serotonin.

      important: genes have an affect and so does things like serotonin on your brain.

    3. evidence is accumulating that some people's brains predispose them toward violence and that psychopathic tendencies may be passed down from one generation to another

      is able (MAYBE) to be passed from one generation to another

    4. This is the orbital cortex, the area that Fallon and other scientists believe is involved with ethical behavior, moral decision-making and impulse control.

      this would be very important to how the brains of serial killers work because the orbital cortex is involved with ethical behavior, moral decision-making, and impulse control. these are all very important things in the minds of serial killers and how they go about life (which is obviously very different than those with regular brains.

    5. He studies the biological basis for behavior, and one of his specialties is to try to figure out how a killer's brain differs from yours and mine.

      How does this happen for people? What are the ways that you can catch killers before they even kill?