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David DiSalvo's Twitter Updates

@angelar70 Thanks for the +K! 243 days ago
RT @edyong209: RT @BoraZ Using nudibranch neurons to promote ipad app & other brilliant ideas from Small Mammal t.co/y4O3CqxS by @DrBond ... 245 days ago
RT @vaughanbell: Scorching review of Roy Baumeister's new book on will power by @tomstafford over at Mind Hacks http://t.co/WpuRmczd 245 days ago
RT @mocost: Biology of Mood & Anxiety Disorders: New BioMed Central journal launched today http://t.co/Q3kGnasy 245 days ago
Natural vs. adaptive styles - my latest on Psych Today http://t.co/O3BAqfzk 249 days ago
 

Looking into the Mind of a Murderer

Posted Jul 13 2010 12:00am

In the first video below, Dr. Jim Fallon discusses his studies of murderers’ brains and the surprising patterns that he has identified, including an overabundance of serotonin in utero for male children (turns out, being “bathed” in the so-called feel-good neurotransmitter isn’t a good thing).  He also discusses an amazing family discovery that he stumbled upon while conducing his research.

The second and third videos are the first two parts of an absolutely chilling interview with the “Ice Man,” Richard Kuklinski, a mafia contract killer and perhaps the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history.

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