Reisig Michael D, Golladay Katelyn A
Arizona State University, Phoenix.
University of Wyoming.
Violence Vict. 2019 Feb 1;34(1):157-174. doi: 10.1891/0886-6708.34.1.157.
This study advances a multidimensional risky lifestyles scale (i.e., casual sex, drug involvement, active nightlife, peer deviance affiliation, and conflict escalation) and tests whether behaviors that bring people into contact with motivated offenders in the absence of capable guardianship mediates the relationship between low self-control and violent victimization. Using cross-sectional survey data from a university-based sample ( = 554), a second-order confirmatory factor model for risky lifestyles is estimated. Multivariate regression equations are used to test the effect of low self-control on violent victimization, and also to determine whether risky lifestyles acts as a mediator variable. The results show that the risky lifestyles scale fully mediates the relationship between low self-control and violent victimization. This observation holds across different measurement approaches and modeling strategies. Additional tests reveal that, when the scale is disaggregated, the effects of the individual dimensions of risky lifestyle vary in terms of effect size and level of statistical significance. While the multidimensional scale has sound psychometric properties, possesses robust directional accuracy, and reflects a broad array of risky behaviors, further refinement is necessary.
本研究提出了一个多维风险生活方式量表(即随意性行为、涉毒、活跃的夜生活、与不良同伴交往以及冲突升级),并检验在缺乏有效监护的情况下,使人们与有动机的犯罪者接触的行为是否介导了低自我控制与暴力受害之间的关系。利用来自一个大学样本(N = 554)的横截面调查数据,估计了一个风险生活方式的二阶验证性因素模型。多元回归方程用于检验低自我控制对暴力受害的影响,并确定风险生活方式是否作为一个中介变量。结果表明,风险生活方式量表完全介导了低自我控制与暴力受害之间的关系。这一观察结果在不同的测量方法和建模策略中都成立。进一步的检验表明,当该量表被分解时,风险生活方式各个维度的影响在效应大小和统计显著性水平方面存在差异。虽然这个多维量表具有良好的心理测量特性、强大的方向准确性,并反映了广泛的风险行为,但仍需要进一步完善。