Berns S B, Jacobson N S, Gottman J M
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle 98105-4631, USA.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 1999 Oct;67(5):666-74. doi: 10.1037//0022-006x.67.5.666.
This study examined the relationship between demand-withdraw interaction and battering in couples with a violent husband. The authors compared the interaction patterns of 47 couples with a violent husband with the interaction patterns of 28 distressed but nonviolent couples and 16 happily married nonviolent couples. All couples engaged in videotaped discussions of problem areas in their marriage. Both batterers and battered women showed less positive communication and more negative communication than did their nonviolent counterparts. Additionally, batterers showed significantly higher levels of both demanding and withdrawing than did other men. Battered women demanded more change than did women in nonviolent marriages but were significantly less inclined to withdraw than were their husbands. The discussion of these findings focuses on the interactional dynamics between batterers and battered women and how these interactions might be understood.
本研究调查了丈夫有暴力行为的夫妻中需求-退缩互动与殴打行为之间的关系。作者将47对丈夫有暴力行为的夫妻的互动模式,与28对关系紧张但无暴力行为的夫妻以及16对婚姻幸福的无暴力行为夫妻的互动模式进行了比较。所有夫妻都对婚姻中的问题领域进行了录像讨论。与无暴力行为的夫妻相比,施暴者和受虐妇女都表现出较少的积极沟通和较多的消极沟通。此外,施暴者在要求和退缩方面的表现明显高于其他男性。与非暴力婚姻中的女性相比,受虐妇女要求更多的改变,但明显比她们的丈夫更不愿意退缩。对这些研究结果的讨论集中在施暴者和受虐妇女之间的互动动态,以及如何理解这些互动。