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Journal Article

Citation

Capaldi DM, Owen LD. J. Fam. Psychol. 2001; 15(3): 425-440.

Affiliation

Oregon Social Learning Center, 160 East 4th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97401-2426, USA. deborahc@oslc.org

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11584793

Abstract

The associations of frequent physical aggression, injury, and fear were examined for a community-based sample of at-risk young couples who were dating, cohabiting, or married. It was hypothesized that frequent physical aggression toward a partner, in the range of shelter samples, is largely caused by antisocial behavior and mutual couple conflict and, thus, that there would be greater similarity across genders in such behavior than has previously been supposed. It was also predicted that levels of injury and fear would be higher in women but that some men would experience these impacts. Findings indicated similarity across genders both in the prevalence of frequent aggression and in its association with antisocial behavior. Furthermore, such aggression was likely to be bidirectional in couples. Contrary to the hypothesis of the study, rates of injury and fear for the women were not significantly higher than for the men.


Language: en

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