Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2012 Nov;27(16):3213-35. doi: 10.1177/0886260512441254. Epub 2012 Apr 30.
Studies have shown that there is a significant association between violent victimization and criminal behavior. One potential explanation for this association is that genetically mediated processes contribute to both violent victimization and criminal behavior. The current study uses data from the twin sample of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (n = 2,568) to examine whether genetic and/or environmental factors explain the correlation between violent victimization and criminal behavior in adolescence and early adulthood. Results from the bivariate genetic analyses reveal that genetic factors explain 39% of the covariance between violent victimization and delinquency in adolescence and 20% of the correlation between violent victimization and criminal behavior in early adulthood. The remaining covariance between violent victimization and criminal behaviors is attributed to the same nonshared environmental factors operating on both. The implications of these findings in relation to the victimization literature are discussed.
研究表明,暴力受害与犯罪行为之间存在显著关联。这种关联的一个潜在解释是,遗传介导的过程既促成了暴力受害,也促成了犯罪行为。本研究利用来自青少年健康纵向研究(National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health)双胞胎样本的数据,考察遗传和/或环境因素是否可以解释青少年和成年早期暴力受害与犯罪行为之间的相关性。双变量遗传分析的结果表明,遗传因素解释了青少年时期暴力受害与违法行为之间 39%的协方差,以及成年早期暴力受害与犯罪行为之间 20%的相关关系。暴力受害与犯罪行为之间剩余的协方差归因于同时作用于两者的相同非共享环境因素。讨论了这些发现与受害文献的关系。