1 / 40

A Gallery Of Dyadic Concordance Type ( DCT) Graphics Murray A. Straus

A Gallery Of Dyadic Concordance Type ( DCT) Graphics Murray A. Straus Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire Durham, NH 03824 603-862-2594 murray.straus@unh.edu To download papers on DCTs, click http ://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2/ CONTENTS

Download Presentation

A Gallery Of Dyadic Concordance Type ( DCT) Graphics Murray A. Straus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Gallery Of Dyadic Concordance Type (DCT) Graphics • Murray A. Straus • Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire • Durham, NH 03824 603-862-2594 murray.straus@unh.edu • To download papers on DCTs, click http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2/ • CONTENTS • PART A. Percent Of Relationships In Each DCT • 1. Physical Assault • 2. Injured Partner • 3. Sexually Coerced • 4. Psychological Aggression • 5. Other Maladaptive Behavior • 6. Concordance Between Parents In Child Socialization • PART B. Correlates Of Being In each DCT • 1. Relation of Couple DCTs To Partner Problems • 2. Relation of Parent Behavior to Child Problems

  2. PART A Percent Of Relationships In Each DCT 1. Physically Assaulted Partner

  3. Dyadic Concordance Types for Minor Assault U.S. National Comorbidity Study (N=8,098) Couple prevalence of assault in past year according to Men 21% Women 23% % Female Respondents Male Respondents Kessler, R. C., Molnar, B. E., Feurer, I. D., & Appelbaum, M. (2001). Patterns and mental health predictors of domestic violence in the United States: Results from the National Comorbidity Survey. International Journal Of Law And Psychiatry, 24(4-5), 487-508.

  4. Dyadic Concordance Types for Severe Assault U.S. National Comorbidity Study (N=8,098) Couple prevalence of assault in past year according to Men 6% Women 8% % Female Respondents Male Respondents Kessler, R. C., Molnar, B. E., Feurer, I. D., & Appelbaum, M. (2001). Patterns and mental health predictors of domestic violence in the United States: Results from the National Comorbidity Survey. International Journal Of Law And Psychiatry, 24(4-5), 487-508.

  5. Concordance In Assault Between Parents Of University Students In 15 Nations * 14% of parents had one or more violent incidents when student was 10 * Among this 14%: Predominant pattern was Both-Violent. Next was Father-Only, Mother-Only almost as high Couple Prevalence: 14% Note: Data for parents as reported by students Same as slide 11 Straus, M. A., & Michel-Smith, Y. (2013). Mutuality, severity, and chronicity of violence by Father-Only, Mother-Only, and mutually violent parents as reported by university students in 15 nations. Child Abuse Negl. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.10.004

  6. Dyadic Concordance for Any & Severe Assault, 1,157 University Student Couples Comparison CTS Short-Form and Full CTS2 ANY ASSAULT SEVERE ASSAULT *Couple Prevalence according to: Short Form: 19% Full Form: 31% *Couple Prevalence according to: Short Form: 6% Full Form: 12% Straus, M. A. and E. M. Douglas (2004). "A short form of the Revised Conflict Tactics Scales, and typologies for severity and mutuality." Violence and Victims 19: 507-520.

  7. 2. Injured Partner

  8. Dyadic Concordance In Injury 180 Couples In Military Treatment Program For Domestic Violence Couple Injury Prevalence 65% % Any Injury Perpetrated Medical Treatment Needed Cantos, Arthur L., Neidig, Peter H., & O'Leary, K Daniel. (1994). Injuries of women and men in a treatment program for domestic violence. Journal of Family Violence, 9(2), 113-124.

  9. Dyadic Concordance Types for Injury As Reported By Men And Women Age 24-33 (National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health N=4,795) Couple Prevalence according to: Males: 4% Females: 4% % Note: DTs are for the sub group of couples in which there was assault Dyadic Concordance Types Type Tillyer, M. S., & Wright, E. M. (2014). Intimate Partner Violence and the Victim-Offender Overlap. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 51(1), 29-55. doi: 10.1177/0022427813484315

  10. Dyadic Concordance In Injury Among 481 University Student Couples Couple Prevalence according to: Males: 11% Females: 9% % Dyadic Concordance Types Type Hines, D. A., & Saudino, K. J. (2003). Gender Differences in Psychological, Physical, and Sexual Aggression Among College Students using the revised Conflict Tactics Scales. Violence & Victims, 18(2), 197-217.

  11. 3. Sexual Coercion

  12. Dyadic Concordance In Past Year Sexual Coercion Probability sample of 3,496 adults Age 18-64 In Six European Cities Couple Prevalence According to: Men: 23% Women: 19% % Male Respondents Female Respondents Costa, Diogo, Hatzidimitriadou, Eleni, Ioannidi-Kapolou, Elli, Lindert, Jutta, Soares, Joaquim, Sundin, Örjan, . . . Barros, Henrique. (2014). Intimate partner violence and health-related quality of life in European men and women: findings from the DOVE study. Quality of Life Research, 1-9. doi: 10.1007/s11136-014-0766-9

  13. Dyadic Concordance In Sexual Coercion As Reported By 2016 Spanish High School Students Prevalence Men= 27% Women= 11% % Female Respondents Male Respondents Fernández-González, L., O’Leary, K. D., & Muñoz-Rivas, M. J. (2014). Age-Related Changes in Dating Aggression in Spanish High School Students. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 29(6), 1132-1152. doi: 10.1177/0886260513506057 dy Of Social Problems annual meeting, New York 8 August 2013. .

  14. Dyadic Concordance In Sexual Coercion Among 194 Beijing China Couples Couple Prevalence: 24% % Dyadic Concordance Type Hou, J., Yu, L., Ting, S.-M., Sze, Y., & Fang, X. (2011). The Status and Characteristics of Couple Violence in China. Journal of Family Violence, 26(2), 81-92. doi: 10.1007/s10896-010-9343-3

  15. Dyadic Concordance In Any Sexual Coercion By 1,157 University Students Comparison of CTS Short-Form with Full CTS2 Prevalence Short: 13% Full: 20% % Short Form Full Form Straus, M. A. and E. M. Douglas (2004). "A short form of the Revised Conflict Tactics Scales, and typologies for seventy and mutuality." Violence and Victims 19: 507-520.

  16. 4. Psychological Aggression Against Partner

  17. Dyadic Concordance In Psychological Aggression Among 194 Beijing China Couples Couple Prevalence: 55% % Dyadic Concordance Type Hou, J., Yu, L., Ting, S.-M., Sze, Y., & Fang, X. (2011). The Status and Characteristics of Couple Violence in China. Journal of Family Violence, 26(2), 81-92. doi: 10.1007/s10896-010-9343-3

  18. Dyadic Concordance In Frequent Psychological Aggression (50th & 80th Percentile) by 6,002 Couples in 2ndNational Family Violence Survey Female Male 50th Percentile Couple Prevalence: 17% Couple Prevalence: 62% % Dyadic Concordance Types Type Straus, Murray A. (2014). Dyadic Concordance Types And Discordance In Three Partner Abuse Behaviors And Other Problematic Behavior By Male And Female Partners  In A National Sample Of  American Couples. Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire. Durham, NH. (For sample description, see Gelles, R., & Straus, M. A. (1988). Intimate violence: The causes and consequences of abuse in the American family. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.)

  19. Dyadic Concordance In Psychological Aggression By 202 Couples In First Year Of Marriage Prevalence 36% Prevalence and DTs used data provided by partner who reported a greater frequency of psychological aggression Cut point for Psychological Aggression: 3 or more times in past year % Panuzio, J., & DiLillo, D. (2010). Physical, Psychological, and Sexual Intimate Partner Aggression Among Newlywed Couples: Longitudinal Prediction of Marital Satisfaction. Journal of Family Violence, 25(7), 689-699. doi: 10.1007/s10896-010-9328-2

  20. 5. Other Types Of Maladaptive Behavior

  21. Dyadic Concordance Types For Drunkenness (Any & 3 +) in Past Year 6,002 Couples in the 2nd National Family Violence Survey Any Drunkenness Couple Prevalence: 34% Respondents Male Female % % Dyadic Concordance Types Type Straus, Murray A. (2014). Dyadic Concordance Types And Discordance In Three Partner Abuse Behaviors And Other Problematic Behavior By Male And Female Partners  In A National Sample Of  American Couples. Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire. Durham, NH. (For sample description, see Gelles, R., & Straus, M. A. (1988). Intimate violence: The causes and consequences of abuse in the American family. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.)

  22. Dyadic Concordance Types For Non-Family Aassault 6,002 Couples in the 2nd National Family Violence Survey Couple Prevalence: 13% % Dyadic Concordance Types Straus, Murray A. (2014). Dyadic Concordance Types And Discordance In Three Partner Abuse Behaviors And Other Problematic Behavior By Male And Female Partners  In A National Sample Of  American Couples. Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire. Durham, NH. (For sample description, see Gelles, R., & Straus, M. A. (1988). Intimate violence: The causes and consequences of abuse in the American family. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.)

  23. Dyadic Concordance In Low Social Participation By Parents Of 158 Children In 3rdGrade Prevalence 62% Mother-father r-=.63 Lows social Participation-Degree of participation of respondent in formal and informal social relationships. Example: About how many times in the past year have you attended meetings or affairs of any local organizations, societies or clubs? 0. 13+, 1. 7-12, 2. 4-6, 3. 1-3, 4. none. % Eron, L., et al. (1961). "Comparison of data obtained from mothers and fathers on childrearing practices and their relation to child aggression." Child Development 32: 457-472.

  24. 6. Concordance Between Parents In Child Socialization

  25. Concordance Between Parents In Verbal Affection To Them As Recalled By 2,548 18-25 Year Old Individuals • Prevalence Affection by one or the other parent: 83% • Chart shows which parent did it. % Polcari, A., Rabi, K., Bolger, E., & Teicher, M. H. (2014). Parental verbal affection and verbal aggression in childhood differentially influence psychiatric symptoms and wellbeing in young adulthood. Child Abuse & Neglect, 38(1), 91-102. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.10.003

  26. Concordance In Rejection By Parents, At Or Above 60th Percentile As Reported By University Students In 15 Nations Prevalence of childhood rejection of Men: 53% Women: 57% The high rate is because child was classified as rejected if either parent’s rejection score was at or above 60th percentile. The bars indicate the % of that subgroup in each type % Female Students Male Students Unpublished data from International Parenting Study. Sample is described in Straus, M. A., & Michel-Smith, Y. (2014). Mutuality, severity, and chronicity of violence by Father-Only, Mother-Only, and mutually violent parents as reported by university students in 15 nations. Child Abuse Negl, 38(4), 664-676. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.10.004

  27. Concordance Between Parents in Corporal Punishment At Age 10 of University Students in 15 nations (N=11,408) % Of Families Straus, M.A. Crime by University Students In 15 Nations: Links To Spanking And Positive Parenting At Age 10 By Father, Mother, And Both Parents. Paper presented at the American Society of Criminology annual meeting. Atlanta, Georgia. 22 November, 2013

  28. Concordance Between Parents In Spanking 3 Year Old Children in The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (n=1,997) Spanked in past month: 65% % Dyadic Concordance Type Taylor, C. A., Lee, S. J., Guterman, N. B., & Rice, J. C. (2010). Use of Spanking for 3-Year-Old Children and Associated Intimate Partner Aggression or Violence. Pediatrics, 415-424.

  29. Dyadic Concordance Types For High Punishment of Child for Dependency By Parents Of 158 Children In 3rdGrade Percent of children experiencing high punishment: 72% Mother-Father r= -.04 Punishment for Dependency-Rewards and punishments of various intensities administered by socializing agent when child asks for help. Ex- ample: What do you usually do when NAME asks for help? (Each response was rated by three % Eron, L., et al. (1961). "Comparison of data obtained from mothers and fathers on childrearing practices and their relation to child aggression." Child Development 32: 457-472.

  30. PART B • Correlates of Being In each • Dyadic Concordance Type • Relation of Couple DCTs To • Partner Problems

  31. Relation of Couple Concordance In Assault To Depression Dating Relationships Of University Students In 15 Nations (N=11,408) WOMEN MEN WHO Depressive Scale Percentile Dyadic Concordance Type • No Violence: Women higher in depression than men • Among Victims: Women victims higher in depression than male victims • Among Perpetrators: Male perpetrators higher in depression than female • Both Assault, i.e. both are victims and also perpetrators: Men higher in depression Dyadic Concordance Type Straus, Muray A., & Winstok, Zeev. (2013). Relation of Dyadic Concordance-Discordance Types of Partner Violence to Depression of Male and Female University Students in 15 Nations. Paper presented at the Society for the Study of Social Problems, New York.

  32. Re Figure 3. Relation Of Couple Concordance In Assault To Depression Of 1,026 Predominantly Low Income Men Presenting At Urban Public Hospital Emergency Room Couple assault rate 37% Depression Dyadic Concordance Type Rhodes, Karin V., Houry, Debra, Cerulli, Catherine, Straus, Helen, Kaslow, Nadine J., & McNutt, Louise-Anne. (2009). Intimate Partner Violence and Comorbid Mental Health Conditions Among Urban Male Patients. Annals of Family Medicine, 7(1), 47-55. doi: 10.1370/afm.936

  33. Relation Of Concordance In Abuse Of Partner* To Depression At Previous Interview WOMEN MEN • * Abuse=one or more times: • Threatened assault • Assault • Insisted on sex • Injured partner • Men Women • Depression mean 9.67 11.1 • Abused partner % 43% 50% Depressive symptoms Dyadic Concordance Type Renner, L. M., & Whitney, S. D. (2012). Risk factors for unidirectional and bidirectional intimate partner violence among young adults. Child Abuse & Neglect, 36(1), 40-52. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2011.07.007

  34. Relation of Dyadic Concordance In Lifetime Sexual Coercion To Poor Mental Health Probability sample of 3,496 adults Age 18-64 In Six European Cities) Poor Mental Health (T score) Dyadic Concordance Type Costa, Diogo, Hatzidimitriadou, Eleni, Ioannidi-Kapolou, Elli, Lindert, Jutta, Soares, Joaquim, Sundin, Örjan, . . . Barros, Henrique. (2014). Intimate partner violence and health-related quality of life in European men and women: findings from the DOVE study. Quality of Life Research, 1-9. doi: 10.1007/s11136-014-0766-9

  35. 2. Relation of Parent Behavior to Child Problems

  36. Both Parents Assaulted Dyadic Concordance Type Is Associated With The Highest Probability Of The Child Later Assaulting A Partner, Mother-Only Second Highest, and Father Only Lowest Increase In Probability Dyadic Concordance In Assault Between Parents At Time 1 Percent Increase in Probability Of Assaulting Current Partner Fehringer, J. A., & Hindin, M. J. (2008). Like Parent, Like Child: Intergenerational Transmission of Partner Violence in Cebu, the Philippines. Journal of Adolescent Health, 44(4), 363-371. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2008.08.012

  37. Rejection As A Child: Relation Of Concordance Between Parents To Criminal Beliefs Of University Students In 15 Nations MEN WOMEN • Male students are more likely to have criminal beliefs • Effect of rejection is greater for men than for women • Criminogenic effect of rejection by mothers and by fathers about the same boys • Example of Criminal Beliefs scale question: It is ok to buy something you knew was stolen % with high score on Criminal Beliefs scale Dyadic Concordance Types of Parental Rejection * *Rejection measured as scores at above 60th percentile Sample is described in Straus, M. A., & Michel-Smith, Y. (2014). Mutuality, severity, and chronicity of violence by Father-Only, Mother-Only, and mutually violent parents as reported by university students in 15 nations. Child Abuse Negl, 38(4), 664-676. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.10.004

  38. The Dyadic Type Make A Difference In the Probability Of Intergenerational Transmission WOMEN MEN • Both-Assault type: Higest intergenerational transmission • Other studies seem to show that it is the Father-Only type because that is the only type studies • Sex of parent by sex of child” effect: • For boys, Father-Only more associated with assaulting a partner than Mother-Only DT • For girls, mother-only more associated with assaulting a dating partner % Who Assaulted Dating Partner (Any Assault) Dyadic Concordance Type Straus, M. A., & Michel-Smith, Y. (2012). Relation of violence between parents of university students in 15 nations to student criminogenic beliefs and crime: A comparison of father-only, mother-only, and mutual parental violence Paper presented at the American Society Of Criminology annual meeting, Chicago, 15 November, 2012.

  39. Violence Between Parents Is Associated With Child Hitting Parents, Especially If Mother Was the Only Parent Who Assaulted Hit Mother Hit Father % Dyadic Type Of Assault Between Parents Ulman, A., & Straus, M. A. (2003). Violence by children against mothers in relation to violence between parents and corporal punishment by parents. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 34(1), 41-60. Fig 3, p. 53

  40. Relation Of Witnessing Assault Between Parents Early in Adolescence to Non-Family Crime When An Adult Arrests Assaults by Men • Both-Violent is most criminogenic • When only one parent assaulted: • Assaults by men: Mother-Only & Father-Only had similar effects • Arrests: Father-Only more criminogenic than Mother-Only In Past Year Dyadic Concordance Type • Straus, M. A. (1992). Children as witnesses to marital violence: A risk factor for life long problems among a nationally representative sample of American men and women. In D. F. Schwartz (Ed.), Children and Violence: Report of the Twenty Third Ross Roundtable on Critical Approaches to Common Pediatric Problems (pp. 98-109). Columbus, Ohio: Ross Laboratories.

More Related