Virginia Commonwealth University Health, Richmond, USA.
University of Durham, UK.
J Interpers Violence. 2021 Oct;36(19-20):9208-9231. doi: 10.1177/0886260519865956. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
Psychopathy has long been associated with aggression. However, few studies have looked at differences between men and women. Studies that do exist demonstrate that psychopathy differentially relates to aggression in men and women and indicate that environmental factors may play a significant role in influencing these associations. A key environmental factor is a history of lifetime physical abuse (LPA), which has been linked to aggressive behavior in both men and women. The aim of the present study was to test if psychopathy differentially predicted physical, verbal, and indirect aggression in men and women, and if these associations were moderated by LPA. In a large community sample of men ( = 369) and women ( = 204), we assessed the 4-facet model of psychopathy (Interpersonal, Affective, Lifestyle, Antisocial) with the Psychopathy Checklist: Screening Version, LPA with the Addiction Severity Index, and self-report aggression with the Aggression Questionnaire. Results revealed sex differences and similarities. Physical aggression was associated with the affective facet of psychopathy in both men and women, though in different directions based on the moderating effects of LPA. Verbal aggression was associated with higher antisocial facet scores and LPA for men and not women. Finally, indirect aggression was associated with the antisocial facet of psychopathy for men, and the interpersonal facet for women, and these associations were not moderated by LPA. In women, low antisocial facet scores and no LPA were found to be protective for indirect aggression. These results show that LPA and psychopathy generally increase the risk of aggression, but the interaction between LPA and psychopathy differentiates the risk of aggression forms for men and women. These sex differences highlight the need for female-responsive interventions to target sex-specific risk factors for aggressive behavior.
精神变态长期以来一直与攻击性有关。然而,很少有研究关注男性和女性之间的差异。现有的研究表明,精神变态与男性和女性的攻击性有不同的关系,并表明环境因素可能在影响这些关联方面发挥重要作用。一个关键的环境因素是一生中有过身体虐待史(LPA),这与男性和女性的攻击行为都有关。本研究的目的是测试精神变态是否不同程度地预测男性和女性的身体、言语和间接攻击,以及这些关联是否受到 LPA 的调节。在一个由男性(n=369)和女性(n=204)组成的大型社区样本中,我们使用《精神变态检查表:筛查版》评估了精神变态的 4 个方面模型(人际、情感、生活方式、反社会),使用《成瘾严重程度指数》评估了 LPA,使用《攻击性问卷》评估了自我报告的攻击性。结果显示了性别差异和相似性。身体攻击与精神变态的情感方面在男性和女性中都有关联,但基于 LPA 的调节作用,方向不同。言语攻击与较高的反社会方面得分和 LPA 有关,而与女性无关。最后,间接攻击与男性的反社会方面和女性的人际方面有关,这些关联不受 LPA 的调节。在女性中,低的反社会方面得分和没有 LPA 被发现对间接攻击有保护作用。这些结果表明,LPA 和精神变态通常会增加攻击性的风险,但 LPA 和精神变态之间的相互作用区分了男性和女性攻击性形式的风险。这些性别差异强调需要针对特定性别风险因素的女性响应干预措施来干预攻击性行为。