Burt S Alexandra, Donnellan M Brent, Humbad Mikhila N, Hicks Brian M, McGue Matt, Iacono William G
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, 48824, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2010 Dec;67(12):1309-15. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2010.159.
Previous studies have indicated that marriage is negatively associated with male antisocial behavior. Although often interpreted as a causal association, marriage is not a random event. As such, the association may stem from selection processes, whereby men less inclined toward antisocial behavior are more likely to marry.
To evaluate selection vs causation explanations of the association between marriage and desistence from antisocial behavior.
Co-twin control analyses in a prospective twin study provided an analogue of the idealized counterfactual model of causation. The co-twin control design uses the unmarried co-twin of a married twin to estimate what the married twin would have looked like had he remained unmarried. Discordant monozygotic (MZ) twins are particularly informative because they share a common genotype and rearing environment.
General community study.
Two hundred eighty-nine male-male twin pairs (65.1% MZ) from the Minnesota Twin Family Study underwent assessment at 17, 20, 24, and 29 years of age. None of the participants were married at 17 years of age, and 2.6% were married at 20 years of age. By 29 years of age, 58.8% of the participants were or had been married.
A tally of criterion C symptoms of DSM-III-R antisocial personality disorder, as assessed via structured clinical interview.
Mean differences in antisocial behavior across marital status at age 29 years were present even at 17 and 20 years of age, suggesting a selection process. However, the within-pair effect of marriage was significant for MZ twins, such that the married twin engaged in less antisocial behavior following marriage than his unmarried co-twin. Results were equivalent to those in dizygotic twins and persisted when controlling for prior antisocial behavior.
Results indicate an initial selection effect, whereby men with lower levels of antisocial behavior are more likely to marry. However, this tendency to refrain from antisocial behavior appears to be accentuated by the state of marriage.
先前的研究表明,婚姻与男性反社会行为呈负相关。尽管这种关联常被解释为因果关系,但婚姻并非随机事件。因此,这种关联可能源于选择过程,即那些不太倾向于反社会行为的男性更有可能结婚。
评估婚姻与停止反社会行为之间关联的选择与因果解释。
前瞻性双胞胎研究中的同卵双胞胎对照分析提供了理想化因果反事实模型的类似物。同卵双胞胎对照设计使用已婚双胞胎的未婚同卵双胞胎来估计如果已婚双胞胎保持未婚状态会是什么样。不一致的同卵(MZ)双胞胎特别有参考价值,因为他们共享相同的基因型和成长环境。
一般社区研究。
来自明尼苏达双胞胎家庭研究的289对男性双胞胎(65.1%为同卵双胞胎)在17、20、24和29岁时接受了评估。所有参与者在17岁时均未婚,20岁时2.6%已婚。到29岁时,58.8%的参与者已婚或曾经结过婚。
通过结构化临床访谈评估的DSM-III-R反社会人格障碍C标准症状的计数。
即使在17岁和20岁时,29岁时婚姻状况在反社会行为方面的平均差异就已存在,这表明存在选择过程。然而,婚姻对同卵双胞胎的配对内效应显著,即已婚双胞胎在婚后比其未婚的同卵双胞胎从事更少的反社会行为。结果与异卵双胞胎的结果相当,并且在控制先前的反社会行为后仍然存在。
结果表明存在初始选择效应,即反社会行为水平较低的男性更有可能结婚。然而,婚姻状态似乎会加剧这种避免反社会行为的倾向。