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Maritally violent men's heart rate reactivity to marital interactions: A failure to replicate the Gottman et al. (1995) typology.
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Citations
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References
2001
Year
Social PsychologyMental HealthDating ViolencePsychologySocial SciencesType 1Partner ViolenceIntimate RelationshipPsychophysiologyMarital InteractionsViolent MenCouple TherapyDomestic ViolenceBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryJ. M. GottmanType 2Marital TherapyCardiovascular ReactivityEmotionSexual AbuseSocial BehaviorFamily PsychologyMedicineHeart Rate ReactivityAggressionPsychopathology
In an attempt to replicate the J. M. Gottman et al. (1995) batterer typology, 58 men who had engaged in moderate-to-severe marital violence in the past year were studied. The sample was split into Gottman et al.'s Type 1 men (i.e., whose heart rates decreased, from baseline, during a marital conflict task) and Type 2 men (i.e., whose heart rates increased). The groups did not differ in the manner predicted on measures of marital violence, antisocial or aggressive-sadistic personality, drug dependence, criminality, general violence, childhood exposure to interparental violence, behavior during marital interactions, or relationship stability. Contrary to expectations, wives of Type 1 men rated their husband as more jealous and angry and reported more marital distress. In the only finding consistent with Gottman et al., Type 2 men scored higher on a measure of dependent personality. Implications for future research are discussed.
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