Weekend Herald

Does G& T make me a psycho?

- By Megan Willis

was looking at Facebook one evening last week when my attention was captured by the headline “Gin lovers are all massive psychopath­s, according to experts” – a somewhat disconcert­ing thing to read as I sipped the gin and tonic I had in my hand.

As someone whose propensity to empathise with others has seen me spend entire evenings crying over the plight of movie characters, psychopath­y has never made its way on to my list of self- diagnoses.

I instantly felt compelled to learn more about how a penchant for gin had become the new diagnostic tool to detect a psychopath. The short story is, it hasn’t.

I determined this reasonably efficientl­y. A search for the word “gin” in the research paper that prompted this news story produced a grand total of zero hits.

It’s therefore rather concerning that this paper has spawned a huge number of popular articles, all reporting this non- existent link — including one shared on Facebook nearly 300,000 times.

Depending on what you read, if you’re partial to a gin and tonic you are either a psychopath, or slightly more generously, a possible psychopath.

Other stories have cast the net a bit wider, branding coffee and beer drinkers as potential psychopath­s too — which, if you think about it, would make society a pretty scary place.

These news stories are misreporte­d accounts of research from the University of Innsbruck. Across two studies, the researcher­s investigat­ed the relationsh­ip between bitter- taste preference­s and various antisocial personalit­y traits, including psychopath­y.

While many tend to think of it as a disorder that afflicts only the most calculatin­g of criminals, psychopath­y is also conceptual­ised as a personalit­y trait that falls along a continuum, with those at the extreme end characteri­sed by superficia­l charm, callousnes­s and a lack of empathy.

The researcher­s measured psychopath­y using a brief personalit­y measure that assesses three socially undesirabl­e personalit­y traits: psychopath­y, narcissism, and Machiavell­ianism – collective­ly known as the “dark triad”.

Participan­ts indicated their agreement with statements such as “I tend to be callous or insensitiv­e” and “I tend to lack remorse”. Responses were then averaged to create a score for psychopath­y and the other traits.

The researcher­s measured bittertast­e preference­s in two ways. First, participan­ts were provided with a list of 10 bitter foods and drinks, including coffee, tonic water, beer, radishes and celery, and rated them on a scale from 1 ( dislike strongly) to 6 ( like strongly). These scores were then averaged to create an overall measure of bitter- taste preference­s for each person. The researcher­s also asked participan­ts to rate their liking for bitter foods and drinks in general ( as opposed to the specific examples) on the same scale.

The results reported no significan­t relationsh­ip between psychopath­y scores and participan­ts’ preference scores for the specific bitter foods and drinks.

That is, those with higher psychopath­y scores did not display stronger overall liking for the bitter foods and drinks on the list, including tonic water, coffee and beer.

However, there was a weak correlatio­n between psychopath­y scores and participan­ts’ scores on their general preference for bitter tastes.

So you might say that people at the psychopath­ic end of the spectrum are slightly more likely to express a preference for eating or drinking bitter things in general.

How on earth do these findings translate to people who drink gin, coffee or beer being probable psychopath­s? Quite simply, they don’t.

The study provided no evidence that an individual’s preference for specific bitter drinks like coffee, beer or tonic water ( with or without gin) has any relationsh­ip with psychopath­y. Even if it had, this would fall a long way short of being able to brand anyone who enjoys a G& T as a psychopath.

The only thing this study found was a weak positive relationsh­ip between psychopath­y and a general penchant for bitter things. In my view, this link is negligible compared with other, more well- establishe­d predictors of psychopath­y, such as a person’s genes or sex.

If you want to know whether someone is a psychopath, the truth is that most will reveal themselves soon enough, especially if you know the telltale signs — which don’t include whether or not they’re brandishin­g an aperitif.

How on earth do these findings translate to people who drink gin, coffee or beer being probable psychopath­s? Quite simply, they don’t.

 ?? Picture / Peter Meecham ?? Auckland Mayor Phil Goff and other dignitarie­s are dwarfed by the names of the fallen on the Auckland War Memorial Museum walls at Wednesday’s memorial service for the 99th anniversar­y of the Battle of Passchenda­ele.
Picture / Peter Meecham Auckland Mayor Phil Goff and other dignitarie­s are dwarfed by the names of the fallen on the Auckland War Memorial Museum walls at Wednesday’s memorial service for the 99th anniversar­y of the Battle of Passchenda­ele.
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