White-collar crimes refer to offenses committed within the economic system, including financial manipulation, corporate fraud, insider trading, and accounting misconduct. Because these crimes are generally perpetrated by individuals with relatively high levels of education, occupational status, and social prestige, they have traditionally been examined primarily through sociological, legal, and economic perspectives. However, recent advances in neuropsychology and neurodevelopmental research suggest that individual differences in risk-taking behavior, impulse control, reward sensitivity, and executive functioning may also contribute to understanding certain forms of financial misconduct.
This article examines white-collar crime from a neurodevelopmental perspective, with particular attention to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), impulsivity, dopamine-mediated reward processing, and executive functions. Current evidence suggests that white-collar crime may be associated not only with economic opportunity and organizational culture but also with neurocognitive characteristics that influence decision-making under conditions of uncertainty and reward.
Historical Background
The concept of white-collar crime was first introduced by sociologist Edwin H. Sutherland in 1939 to describe crimes committed by individuals of high social status during the course of their professional activities. This concept challenged traditional criminological theories, which largely focused on poverty, social inequality, and environmental disadvantage as primary explanations for criminal behavior.
Over the past several decades, developments in behavioral neuroscience have demonstrated that criminal behavior cannot be explained solely through social and economic variables. Research on executive functioning, impulse regulation, reward processing, and decision-making has provided valuable insights into the cognitive mechanisms that may influence both lawful and unlawful behavior.
From a neurodevelopmental perspective, cognitive abilities such as attention regulation, inhibitory control, planning, and behavioral flexibility begin developing early in life and continue to mature into early adulthood. Variations in these processes may influence how individuals evaluate risks, resist temptations, and regulate behavior across different contexts. Within this framework, impulsivity, altered reward sensitivity, and executive dysfunction may, in certain circumstances, increase vulnerability to financial and ethical boundary violations.
Accordingly, the purpose of this article is to examine white-collar crime not merely as an economic or sociological phenomenon but also as a complex behavioral pattern that may, in some cases, be influenced by neurodevelopmental factors.
The Psychological Dimension of White-Collar Crime
Although white-collar crimes are often perceived as deliberate and highly rational decisions, psychological research suggests that complex motivational processes frequently underlie such behaviors.
Common psychological motivations include:
- the pursuit of power and status
- expectations of financial gain
- heightened risk-taking tendencies
- the reinterpretation or rationalization of ethical boundaries
According to Albert Bandura’s theory of moral disengagement, individuals may cognitively restructure unethical behavior in ways that reduce feelings of guilt or personal responsibility, thereby allowing them to engage in misconduct while maintaining a positive self-image (Bandura, 1999).
Within organizational settings, moral disengagement often operates through mechanisms such as:
- believing that “everyone does it”
- prioritizing organizational goals over personal ethical standards
- perceiving misconduct as a technical or victimless act
- diffusing responsibility across groups or hierarchical structures
These cognitive mechanisms help individuals psychologically legitimize behaviors that would otherwise conflict with their moral values.
A Neurodevelopmental Perspective: Executive Functions and Impulsivity
Neurodevelopmental research suggests that certain cognitive processes may contribute to vulnerability for risky decision-making. Particular attention has been given to the prefrontal cortex, a brain region responsible for higher-order executive functions.
Executive functions include:
- decision-making
- impulse inhibition
- planning
- cognitive flexibility
- risk evaluation
- anticipating long-term consequences
- behavioral self-regulation
Functional differences or temporary impairments within these systems may increase an individual’s tendency to prioritize immediate rewards while underestimating future consequences (Arnsten, 2009).
In financial decision-making, three cognitive processes appear particularly important:
- reward expectation
- impulse control
- tolerance for delayed gratification
Weaknesses in these processes may increase preference for immediate gains despite significant long-term risks.
ADHD and Risk-Taking Behavior
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by difficulties with executive functioning, sustained attention, impulsivity, and altered reward processing.
Research has consistently shown that individuals with ADHD are, on average, more likely to demonstrate:
- elevated risk-taking behavior
- impulsive decision-making
- reduced tolerance for delayed rewards
- greater susceptibility to financial decision-making errors
Neuroimaging studies further suggest that dopamine-mediated reward pathways function differently in many individuals with ADHD (Volkow et al., 2011). These neurobiological differences may contribute to stronger preferences for immediate reinforcement and increased sensitivity to potential rewards.
Consequently, some individuals may be more inclined to:
- seek rapid financial gains
- engage in high-risk investments
- make impulsive financial decisions
- push ethical boundaries under rewarding circumstances
However, an important distinction must be emphasized.
ADHD is not synonymous with criminal behavior.
The vast majority of individuals with ADHD never engage in criminal activity. Neurodevelopmental characteristics should therefore be understood as potential contributors to decision-making tendencies rather than direct causes of unlawful behavior. Criminal conduct emerges through the interaction of biological, psychological, social, ethical, and environmental factors.
The Interaction Between Organizational Culture and Neuropsychological Factors
White-collar crime cannot be adequately explained by individual characteristics alone. Organizational environments and systemic pressures also play a substantial role in shaping ethical decision-making.
Examples include:
- intense performance expectations
- highly competitive organizational cultures
- financial incentive structures
- low perceived likelihood of detection or punishment
- normalization of unethical practices
These conditions may amplify existing tendencies toward risk-taking.
From a neurodevelopmental perspective, it is the interaction between cognitive characteristics and environmental pressures that becomes especially important.
For some individuals, the combination of:
heightened risk-taking tendencies + intense organizational pressure
may create conditions that increase the likelihood of ethical violations.
This interactional perspective aligns with contemporary models in psychology and criminology, which emphasize that behavior emerges through continuous interplay between personal characteristics and environmental contexts rather than from either factor alone.
Conclusion
White-collar crimes have historically been explained primarily through economic opportunity, organizational structures, and sociological factors. Contemporary developments in neuroscience and psychology, however, suggest that these behaviors are considerably more complex.
In particular, research has highlighted the potential influence of:
- executive functioning
- reward sensitivity
- impulsivity
- risk-taking tendencies
- inhibitory control
These neurocognitive characteristics may contribute to differences in financial decision-making and ethical judgment among individuals.
Nevertheless, these findings should not be interpreted deterministically. Neurodevelopmental characteristics alone cannot explain criminal behavior. Ethical values, personality, organizational culture, legal oversight, and broader social norms remain equally important determinants of behavior.
For this reason, understanding white-collar crime requires a genuinely multidisciplinary perspective that integrates neuroscience, psychology, criminology, organizational behavior, sociology, and law.
Ultimately, white-collar crime should be viewed not merely as an economic or legal phenomenon but also as a complex behavioral process with important psychological and neurobiological dimensions.
Future research would benefit from further examining the roles of:
- executive functions
- impulse regulation
- reward processing
- cognitive control
- financial risk-taking
Integrating neurodevelopmental perspectives into criminal psychology may contribute not only to a deeper understanding of financial misconduct but also to the development of more effective organizational ethics policies, preventive interventions, and evidence-based risk management strategies.
References (APA 7)
Arnsten, A. F. T. (2009). Stress signalling pathways that impair prefrontal cortex structure and function. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 10(6), 410–422.
Bandura, A. (1999). Moral disengagement in the perpetration of inhumanities. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 3(3), 193–209.
Sutherland, E. H. (1949). White Collar Crime. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Volkow, N. D., Wang, G. J., Kollins, S. H., et al. (2011). Evaluating dopamine reward pathway in ADHD. JAMA, 305(11), 1084–1091.


