Publication | Closed Access
Psychophysiological Profiles of Batterers: Autonomic Emotional Reactivity as It Predicts the Antisocial Spectrum of Behavior Among Intimate Partner Abusers.
94
Citations
36
References
2005
Year
Affective NeuroscienceIntimate Partner AbusersAutonomic Emotional ReactivityDating ViolencePsychologySocial SciencesPartner ViolencePsychophysiologyViolenceDomestic ViolenceHealth SciencesHeart RateBehavioral SciencesDomestic Violence PreventionPsychiatryAutonomic HyporeactivityCardiovascular ReactivitySocial StressPsychological ViolencePsychophysiological ProfilesEmotionAggressionPsychopathologyPhysiological Reactivity
On the basis of studies finding heart rate deceleration among severely violent (SV) batterers (J. M. Gottman et al., 1995) and unsuccessful psychopaths (S. S. Ishikawa, A. Raine, T. Lencz, S. Bihrle, & L. Lacasse, 2001), this study compares the physiological reactivity of SV batterers (n=35) with low-level violent (LLV) batterers (n=37) and nonviolent men (n=21) during 2 laboratory tasks. Men's heart rate and skin conductance level were recorded during baseline, a conflict discussion, and a standardized anger induction. Results suggest that autonomic hyporeactivity is a risk marker for antisocial features among SV men, whereas autonomic hyperreactivity is a risk marker among LLV men. Psychophysiological responding appears to be a stronger correlate of general antisocial behavior than of intimate partner abuse.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1