학술논문

The Relationship of Intimate Partner Aggression to Head Injury, Executive Functioning, and Intelligence.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Marital & Family Therapy; Jul2012, Vol. 38 Issue 3, p471-485, 15p, 5 Charts
Subject
Verbal ability
Aggression (Psychology)
Head injuries
Intimate partner violence
Executive function
Language
ISSN
0194472X
Abstract
Measures of head injury, executive functioning, and intelligence were given to a community sample composed of 102 male perpetrators of intimate partner aggression (IPA) and 62 nonaggressive men. A history of head injury and lower mean score on a measure of verbal intelligence were associated with the frequency of male-perpetrated physical IPA as reported by male perpetrators and their female partners. Lower mean scores on a measure of verbal intelligence also predicted frequency of psychological IPA perpetration. Using the perpetrator subtypes outlined by Holtzworth-Munroe et al. (2000), analyses revealed that compared with other groups, the most severely aggressive subtypes (i.e., borderline-dysphoric and generally violent-antisocial) were the most likely to report a history of head injury and to have significantly lower mean scores on a neuropsychological test of verbal intelligence. The possible role of neuropsychological factors in IPA perpetration and implications for prevention and intervention programs are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]