| Literature DB >> 25059494 |
Katie Lee Salis1, Sören Kliem, K Daniel O'Leary.
Abstract
A number of different methodologies have been employed to investigate the complex relationship between psychological and physical aggression. Herein, a method of unbiased recursive partitioning (conditional inference trees) was applied to a longitudinal sample to identify cutoffs of psychological aggression at baseline that differentiate between individuals who do and do not perpetrate physical aggression at follow-up. The algorithm categorized men into low- and high-risk groups, and women into mild-, moderate-, or high-risk categories of perpetration. Couples responded anonymously to a self-report measure of psychological and physical aggression (CTS2) at baseline and a 12-month follow-up. Sensitivity analyses for predicting physical aggression reached as high as 59% for women and 60% for men.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25059494 DOI: 10.1111/jmft.12089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Marital Fam Ther ISSN: 0194-472X