Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York.
Aggress Behav. 2012 Jan-Feb;38(1):1-15. doi: 10.1002/ab.20414. Epub 2011 Sep 19.
Individual and dyadic stability models of newlyweds' physical aggression were evaluated in a sample of 394 newlywed community couples recruited at engagement and followed for 2.5 years. Aggression in young couples was hypothesized to be a stable, enduring trait, consistent with a latent state-trait conceptualization. However, the findings indicated that aggression can more parsimoniously be conceptualized as a "somewhat stable" trait with strong short-term correlations that gradually decrease at increasing intervals. Aggression was significantly dyadic. Men and women's aggression were consistently associated with one another across time beginning at engagement, with little evidence that one person's aggression evoked aggression in the partner in the time intervals studied. Consistency in a person's reporting of aggression, not shared with the partner, was strongest for self-reports.
对 394 对新婚夫妇进行了个体和对偶稳定模型的评估,这些夫妇是在订婚时招募的,并随访了 2.5 年。假设新婚夫妇的攻击性是一种稳定的、持久的特征,与潜在的状态-特质概念一致。然而,研究结果表明,攻击性可以更简洁地被概念化为一种“有些稳定”的特征,具有很强的短期相关性,随着时间的推移逐渐降低。攻击性具有明显的对偶性。男性和女性的攻击性在订婚开始时就一直相互关联,几乎没有证据表明一个人的攻击性会在研究的时间间隔内引起伴侣的攻击性。一个人对攻击性的报告的一致性,而不是与伴侣共享,在自我报告中最强。