| Literature DB >> 35457353 |
Shalini Munusamy1,2, Sobana Jeyagobi1, Isa Naina Mohamed3, Jaya Kumar Murthy3, Sheau Tsuey Chong1, Hilwa Abdullah1, Mohamamad Rahim Kamaluddin1.
Abstract
Aggressive behavior in romantic relationship has serious effects, including both intra- and inter-personal issues. Aggressive behaviors in romantic relationships have been linked to underlying familial problems. While there have been previous reviews that studied on many interpersonal and dyadic implications of aggressive behavior in romantic relationships, there is nonetheless a lack of studies on the various components of familial factors for aggressive behavior in romantic relationships. The databases Scopus, MEDLINE, Google Scholar, and SAGE Journals were used to search for terms that are related to familial factors (family factor, family support, family relationship) as well as terms related to aggressive behavior in romantic relationships (aggression in romantic relationship, violence in intimate relationship). The articles considered for this review were original studies, samples, or subsamples of males or females who reported any underlying familial factors in childhood or adulthood that contributed to aggressive behavior in romantic relationship, and the studies must be written in English. This review has 27 papers that met the inclusion criteria. The findings from this review revealed the presence of inconsistent conclusions between familial factors and aggressive behavior in romantic relationships, with some studies failing to establish such links. These findings are reviewed with regards to the existing gaps in the literature as well as potential research options.Entities:
Keywords: aggressive behavior; familial factors; family relationship; family supports; parenting; romantic relationship
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457353 PMCID: PMC9029278 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Flowchart of article identification, screening, and inclusion.
Keyword Search List.
| Term | Keyword That Was Used for Searching Process |
|---|---|
| Familial Factors | (“Familial Factors” OR “Family Support” OR “Family Relationship”) AND |
| Aggressive Behavior | (“Aggressive Behavior” OR “Aggression” OR “Violent”) AND |
| Romantic Relationship | (“Intimate Relationship” OR “Adult” OR “Love”) |
Article-Finding Criteria.
| Criteria | Inclusive | Exclusive |
|---|---|---|
| Year Duration | 2010–2021 | No exclusion |
| Language | English/Malay article | Not English/Malay articles |
| Country | All countries | No exclusion |
| Article | Type of Journal (Empirical Data) | Not a research article |
General Description of Study.
| References | Country | Design | Sample Size | Familial Factors | Aggressive Behaviors in Romantic Relationships |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gover et al. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | A mean average of 24 years (SD = 3.20) from a total of 2541 students. | Violence in the family of origin | Dating violence among college students |
| Milletich et al. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | Participants (183 males, 475 females) | Exposure to interparental violence and childhood physical abuse | Physical aggression in dating relationships |
| Fosco et al. (2016) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | Young adults ( | Family relationship quality as key individual and family-level factors | Adolescent hostile aggressive behavior |
| Karakurt et al. (2013) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | The sample consisted of 87 heterosexual pairs with an average age of 22.3 years (SD = 4.80). | Parental conflict and parent to child aggression | Dating aggression |
| Laporte et al. (2011) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional study | A total of 471 teenagers aged 12 to 19 were recruited from a population sample and those in the care of a juvenile protection agency. | Family violence | Dating violence |
| Byrd and Bierman (2013) [ | USA | Longitudinal study | Individuals ( | Family factors | Dating violence |
| Paat et al. (2016) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | The sample for the study included 3495 participants ranging in age from 18 to 40 years old from several (16) public, rural, private, urban, or suburban universities or colleges across the USA. | Family social structure | Physical aggression in dating |
| Simons et al. (2012) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 2088 undergraduates (1774 women and 314 men) | Parental warmth | Dating violence |
| Tschann et al. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 150 male and female adolescents, aged 16 to 20. | Nonviolent aspects of interparental conflict | Physical violence and verbal aggression in romantic relationships |
| Vezina et al. (2015) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional study | 443 female individuals were assessed during adolescence (age 15) and early adulthood (age 21). | Influence of history of family violence | Dating victimization; psychological, physical, and sexual violence |
| Xia et al. (2018) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 974 pre-adolescents (mean age = 12.4, 62.1% female) were tracked through to young adulthood (mean age = 19.5). | Parenting practices | Romantic relationship violence |
| Clarey et al. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 204 high-school students of ages 15 to 17 from Mexico, in which 129 were female, and 75 were male. | Interparental conflict | Dating violence among teens |
| Fritz et al. (2013) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional study | 137 heterosexual female college students (18 to 25) with mean of 20.76 (SD = 1.87). | Attachment style with parents | Dating aggression |
| Grych and Kinsfogel (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 391 students aged 14 to 18 years old, in which 52% of them were female, with mean age of 15.6 and SD of 1.1 years. | Family aggression | Dating aggression |
| Miga et al. (2010) [ | USA | Longitudinal study | 93 adolescents who had romantic partners (1st quarter mean = 14.28, SD = 0.78); (2nd quarter mean = 18.25, SD = 1.25). 42% male and 58% male. | Paternal attachment insecurity | Romantic partner’s aggression |
| Lee et al. (2013) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | A total of 351 men, or about 8% of the overall sample, took part in the study. | History of childhood family violence | Male intimate partner violence |
| Santona et al. (2019) [ | Italy | Cross-sectional study | There were 43 females and 168 males. The students ranged from age 14 to 18, with a mean age of 16.85 years and SD of 1.41. | Attachment styles with parents | Aggression in romantic relationships |
| Clark et al. (2015) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 323 students consisting of 89 males and 234 women (median age = 19) from a midsized U.S. university took part in the study. | Parenting styles | Relational aggression |
| Wright (2015) [ | Greece | Cross-sectional study | Total participants were 600 (326 female with mean age = 17.53, SD = 0.51) 12th graders from one public high school. | Parental attachment | Cyber aggression in romantic relationships |
| Kokkinos and Voulgaridou (2017) [ | Greece | Cross-sectional study | 261 Greek junior-high school children comprising of 127 girls of varying age (12 to 15) (SD = 1.22, mean = 13.4). | Parenting behaviors | Relational aggression |
| Bernstein et.al (2015) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | Participants were 45 college students amounting to 60% from a prominent public university in California; 37 of them were women. (mean age = 20.6, SD = 2.3). | Parental divorce | Aggression in romantic attachment |
| Heifetz et al. (2010) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional study | 1765 young teenagers (grades 5 to 8) from intact and divorced homes; each 1315 and 379. | Parental divorce, family conflict, and parental monitoring | Adolescent conflict relationships |
| Richards and Branch (2012) [ | USA | Longitudinal study | Wave I conducted in 2001 of the Toledo Adolescent Relationship Study (TARS), a 5-year investigation ( | The level of parental social support | Physical dating violence |
| Tyler et al. (2011) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional study | 80 male and female high-school students as well as 52 middle-school students from several parts of the United States participated. | Effect of poor parenting | Male and female dating violence |
| Leadbeater et al. (2017) [ | Canada | Longitudinal study | Six cycles of data involving 662 participants (342 females) aged 12 to 18 years old in 2003 were collected biennially during a ten-year period. This study focused on 334 youth who were in a current romantic relationship at the sixth phase (T6, 10 years later). | Parents psychological control | Intimate partner violence |
| Berzenzki et al. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | A total of 2169 undergraduate students (63.8% female) from a large West Coast university took part in the study. | Childhood emotional abuse | Relationship violence |
| Lohman. et al. (2013) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | 19 to 23 years and adults from 27–31 years according to the Iowa Youth and Families Project ( | Parents’ psychological violence | Intimate partner violence |
Findings of Studies.
| Reference | Tool | Finding | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gover et al. (2010) [ | Revised CTS (CTS2; Straus, Hamby, Boney McCoy, & Sugarman, 1996) | When compared to those who did not observe their mother hitting their father, students who experienced such violence are more likely to endure physical violence in romantic relationships. In dating relationships, women are more likely than males to be the victims of physical abuse. | The cross-sectional character of these data, judgments concerning causal links are impossible to draw. Furthermore, given the participants in this study were a diverse group of students, caution is required when extrapolating the findings to individuals outside of the academic in situations. |
| Milletich et al. (2010) [ | Revised Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS2-CA; Straus 2000) | The extent of dating aggressiveness was linked to exposure of mother-to-father violence and constant childhood abuse among women. These forms of abuse as a youngster were linked to the severity of dating aggression in men. | Future studies may include the verification of these findings by surveying both dating partners, obtaining parental accounts, and doing experimental investigations that directly monitor partner’s actions. |
| Fosco et al. (2016) [ | Hostile/Aggressive Behaviors scale, which was derived from the National Youth Survey (Elliott, Huizinga, and Ageton, 1985) | Reduced hostile aggressive behavior was linked to a more favorable family climate, but hostile aggressive behavior was not linked to changes in family climate. Furthermore, the impact of the family climate on hostile aggressive behavior remained stable throughout time. Young adult romantic relationships were predicted differently by hostile aggressive behavior and familial climate: increased HAB during adolescence predicted relationship violence, whereas family stability predicted relationship violence. | This study was confined to data from a single informant, which may have skewed or exaggerated the degree to which certain factors are connected. Multi-informant approaches to analyzing familial, individual, and romantic relationships as well as multimethod techniques that depend on objective assessments should be used in future studies. |
| Karakurt et.al., (2013) [ | Parent-to-Child Violence (Cappell and Heiner 1990; Kwong et al. 2003) | Women who had witnessed parental conflict were more likely to be mistreated by their spouses. Parental conflict had a strong favour able direct influence on women who were assaulted by their partners when they were children. | It’s critical to expand this research by gathering more data from a wider spectrum of individuals in terms of age and socioeconomic background. |
| Laporte et al. (2011) [ | The Sexual and Physical Abuse Questionnaire (SPAQ) Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS; Straus, 1979) | Depending on gender and risk level, adolescents transfer negative childhood experiences of family violence into their intimate relationships in various ways. Female adolescents who had been abused by either of their parents were more likely to experience victimization in their dating relationships but not aggression. Adolescent boys who had experienced childhood trauma were more likely to be aggressive toward their girlfriends, especially if their father had reprimanded them brutally. | The variability within the high-risk group, as seen by the lack of access to the adolescents’ partners’ perspectives, is one of these results: these adolescents were referred to protective services for a variety of issues. |
| Byrd and Bierman (2013) [ | Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS; Straus 1979) | The findings show that aggressive family dynamics in childhood and early adolescence promote the development of dating violence by encouraging a child’s oppositional-aggressive reacting style in the home, which is subsequently generalized to other situations. | The contribution of longitudinal evidence, including parent, teacher, and teenage accounts from both boys and girls, is restricted by flaws mentioned in the discussion. A study on the correlation between variables and person-oriented group comparisons as well as a dual-emphasis on the prediction of perpetration and victimization combined would create a distinctive contribution to the burgeoning literature. |
| Paat et al. (2016) [ | Conflict Tactics Scales (CTS2) | Although connections with parental education were not mathematically significant, participants were more likely to undergo victimisation or inflict aggression in relationships characterised by conflicts, distress, dominance, or psychological aggression when they lived in a two-parent household. | Examining relationships and interactions with other variables could lead to hypotheses for future longitudinal investigations. Furthermore, students are more likely to reflect middle-class communities. Hence, violence in the college context can be different qualitatively from violence in another set of samples with similar interest. Furthermore, due to fear, some participants may have been hesitant to disclose any involvement in violent misconducts. |
| Simons et al. (2012) [ | Conflict Tactics Scale (Straus, 1990) | Interparental hostility interacted with interparental friendliness to predict dating violence in both men and women. Maternal warmth mitigated the effect of maternal hostility on dating violence in women, such that the link between maternal hostility and both markers of dating violence (perpetration and victimization) was much larger when the mother also displayed warmth. | Because the findings appear to be one of the pioneers to show such amplification effects, they must be replicated. |
| Tschann et al. (2010) [ | Multidimensional Assessment of Interparental Conflict (MAIC; Tschann, Flores, Pasch, & Marin, 1999) | At the 12-month follow-up, 77 percent of teenagers admitted to engaging in or attempting to engage in sexual activity. Their most recent dating partners have been verbally abusive. Interparental violence was found to be a strong predictor of relationship violence. The findings suggest the importance of nonviolent parental conflict as a factor in adolescent dating violence, in addition to the effects of interparental violence. | The findings are not suitable to be applied to teenagers whose parents are either divorced or not insured, as they aremore likely to be involved in dating related violence. Furthermore, those who were not able to follow-up may have been at a higher threat of being involved in dating violence. |
| Vezina et al. (2015) [ | Psychological Maltreatment of Women Inventory (PMWI; Kasian & Painter, 1992) | A higher likelihood of girls being victimised mentally and/or physically/sexually in their romantic relationships was linked to a history of parental violence, childhood behavior is sues, and teenage high-risk behaviors, whether in adolescence, early adulthood, or both developmental stages. | Reproduce this study with a bigger and more varied sample to enhance the findings so that it is more universal. Finally, the reference period employed in the dating victimisation measures which refers to a specific time period of 1 year and just one love partner could be linked to an underestimating of victimisation rates. |
| Xia et al. (2018) [ | Family Environment Scale (Moos and Moos, 1981) | In their young adult love relationship, adolescents who had grown up in a more pleasant familial environment reported better problem-solving skills and less violent behavior. Positive adolescent family interaction was linked to feelings of love in young adult romantic relationships. | Future studies may consider to extend the cognitive development scope further into early childhood. This would in return provide a more comprehensive view of the development of young adult romantic relationships. Besides, other relationship outcomes can be examined andemulate these observations with multi informant mixed methodology participant, mixed methodology information would be favourable. |
| Clarey et al. (2010) [ | Exposure to Interparental Conflict Interparental conflict Moos and Moos (1994) | Anger management, interparental conflict exposure, and dating violence perpetration are all linked in a substantial way. Acceptance of violence, exposure towards interparental and dating violence perpetration were also found to be significantly associated to each other, with those who experienced significant amount of interparental violence and tolerate the use of violence in their dating relationships being the most likely | The findings suggest the use of family based therapies for Mexican youth and their parents that address inter-parental conflict, highlight anger management skills, and challenge acceptance of violence ideas. |
| Fritz et al. (2013) [ | The Experiences in Close Relationships Scale (ECR; Brennan et al., 1998) | If women were more anxiously linked to their parents, they reported greater incidence of dating victimisation (r = 0.30, | The researchers made no distinction between women who just reported victimisation and those who reported both victimisation and DA perpetration. Women that are mutually aggressive should be compared with women that are victims only to have a deeper clarification of the risk factors connected with DA victimization. |
| Grych & Kinsfogel (2010) [ | Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS; Straus, 1979) | By altering their ideas about the acceptability of aggressiveness and their ability to control and manipulate anger, youths’ romantic attachment style might enhance the effects of familial aggression on abusive behavior in dating relationships. | Because the data is cross-sectional, it can not be used to address causation concerns. It’s unclear if youngsters’ job framework influence their behavior toward their partners or vice versa. This is due to that the nature of their relationship affects their attachment style. Longitudinal research would allow for a more sensitive examination of the relationship between attachment, attitudes, emotions, and behavior. |
| Miga et al. (2010) [ | Adult Attachment Interview (George, Kaplan & Main, 1996) and Q-set (Kobak, Cole, Ferenz-Gillies, Fleming & Gamble, 1993) | After accounting for other attachment indices acquired from the teen, measures from the Experience in Close Relationships questionnaire (partner report) showed that teen attachment anxiety remained predictive of teen physical aggression. In the romantic context, overall attachment insecurity increases the chance of perpetrating aggression. | Although the use of a community sample maximises the accurateness of the findings, partner aggressiveness was typically mild, therefore these findings should not be applied to high-risk populations. |
| Lee et al. (2013) [ | Aggression Questionnaire, adapted from Buss and Perry (1992) | According to the findings, perpetrators with a history of family violence are more likely to support notions that portray women and feminine characteristics in a negative light. While childhood exposure to familial violence is not required for IPV to develop, it may be a marker for more severe attitudinal and behavioral disorders. | The study relied on men’s self-reports, which could have resulted in reporting bias. This is especially true in the case of retroactive claims of family violence, which are prone to recall limits or intetional misreporting due to social desirability. |
| Santona et al. (2019) [ | The Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment (IPPA) (Greenberg et al. 1983). | Insecure father-child attachment styles in males seems to be linked to higher levels of anxiety and avoidance in romantic relationships, followed by aggressiveness. An insecure mother-child attachment pattern appears to be linked to greater levels of aggression in females. | Because a battery of instruments was given to all of the participants at the same time, the findings may be tainted by a social desirability bias. A stratified analysis based on age class, as well as a deeper evaluation of the diversification in the parameters included in this study and other sociocultural characteristics, might be possible with more research with a bigger sample size |
| Clark et al. (2015) [ | Parental Authority Questionnaire (PAQ; Buri, 1991) | Relational aggression was found to be negatively connected to authoritative parenting, implying that emerging adults who were raised in this fashion were less likely to engage in relationally hostile activities. Permissive parenting and parental psychological control, on the other hand, were positively linked to relational aggressiveness. | As means for continuous learning towards the formation and maintenance of relational aggressiveness, researchers must look into the temporal and reciprocal patterns of the constructs. |
| Wright (2015) [ | Self-reported Partner-Directed Cyber Aggression The inventory of parent and peer attachmen (Armsden and Greenberg 1987) | Through the mediation of anxious partner attachment, insecure parental attachment from teenagers’ mothers was linked to insecure partner attachment and had an indirect effect on their relationship-directed cyber violence. | In terms of parental attachment and partner attachment as well as cyber violence in romantic relationships, the current study relied on self-reports. Self-report are generally bias. Hence, follow-up studies should include both parent and partner reports due to the fact that adolescents may have underreported these actions so that a favourable self-presentation can be preserved. The partner report may be useful for learning more about relationship-directed cyber violence |
| Kokkinos & Voulgaridou, (2017) [ | The five-item RA subscale from the children’s social behavior scale-self report (CSBS-SR; Crick & Grotpeter, 1995) | The findings supported the hypothesis that parental psychological control (the polar opposite of psychological autonomy) would be positively correlated with Relational Aggression, confirming previous research findings that adolescents with more psychologically controlling parents are more likely to engage in relationally aggressive behaviors in roman tic relationships. | Although the sample’s size and cultural variety are significant, a college student sample’s selection to the overall population is limited. Despite the sample’s small age bracket, it represented an age cohort with a high risk of dating violence (Capaldi, Shortt, & Kim, 2005; Wilt & Olson, 1996), making it more scientifically relevant than a sample of different ages. |
| Bernstein et al. (2015) [ | Experiences in Close Relationships-Revised Scale (ECR-R; Fraley, Waller, & Brennan, 2000) | Parental divorce, and particularly the fear of abandonment, increases the chance of insecure romantic attachment, but not of other bad outcomes. | Gauge the relationships presented here with a bigger data sample which would give you the potential to look at moderators like age at divorce and a more evenly distributed gender distribution. |
| Heifetz et al. (2010) [ | Conflict Resolution Scale was adapted from Parker and Asher’s (1993) | In comparison to young adults from intact families, teenagers from divorced homes report more dating, are more susceptible to romantic influence, and have similar romantic relationship quality. | Future research should keep a developmental focus because adolescents may react differently to contextual elements within the family system. In addition to the variables explored in this study, other variables should be investigated because family processes may play a vital influence in teenagers’ romantic relationships |
| Richards & Branch (2012) [ | Revised Conflict Tactics Scale (Straus & Gelles, 1990) | Parental social support has little bearing on whether a child is a victim of dating violence. Guys who are older, have experienced more parental violence, and have higher average grades are more likely to be victims of dating violence than younger males who have experienced less parental abuse. When comparing male kids with greater levels of teenage committed family violence to male youth with lower levels of teenage perpetrated family violence, dating violence victimisation is lower | To examine the temporal ordering of individuals’ degrees of social support from family and friends and their involvement in dating violence, longitudinal studies are needed. The current study omitted a measure of emotional dating violence, which, according to previous research, can exist in relationships even when there is no physical violence. |
| Tyler et al. (2011) [ | Lack of parental warmth was measured at Wave 1 and included six items regarding the respondent’s relationship to his or her residential mother and residential father. Dating violence perpetration was measured at Wave 3 using three items that asked respondents about their violent behaviors toward a dating partner. Dating violence victimization was measured at Wave 3 using three items that asked respondents about their partner’s violent behaviors. | More physical abuse, poor parental warmth, and increased delinquency all had positive direct impacts on dating violence perpetration, while more physical abuse, low parental warmth, and higher delinquency all had positive direct impacts on dating violence victimisation. | First, respondents were asked to report on their spouses’ violent behavior toward them, which may have led to some underreporting. Second, because the data set contained few distinct signs of violence, we were unable to keep the outcome variables continuous, which may have limited our capacity to explain dating violence. |
| Leadbeater et al. (2017) [ | The Self-Report Measure of Dating Victimization and Aggression (Leadbeater et al., 2008; Linder et al., 2002) | In adolescence and early adulthood, experiences of parental psychological control and relational aggression due to peer pressure as well as victimization promote young adults’ tolerance for, or use of, relational intimate partner violence as a method in resolving romantic relationship issues. | Multiple variables that have been linked to physical IPV in previous studies must be examined. We also excluded physical aggression and victimization from romantic partnerships, so we cannot draw any conclusions about potential links between physical and relational aggression in romantic partnerships. |
| Berzenski et al. (2010) [ | The Childhood Maltreatment Interview Schedule (Briere, 1992) | Both victimisation and perpetration of marital violence were predicted by childhood emotional maltreatment. | The study’s exclusive focus on dating aggression, longitudinal data is still being gathered on this sample, which will likely result in a larger sample of teen daters over time, allowing for prospective assessments of the relationships examined in this study. |
| Lohman et al. (2013) [ | Self-Efficacy in Romantic Relationships (SERR; Bradbury, 1989) | The findings reveal that adolescent exposure to psychological violence from parents is a strong predictor of intimate partner violence in adulthood. In adulthood, exposure to family stress was linked to intimate partner violence, but not in emerging adulthood. | The study’s cross-sectional design limits the capacity to assess directional hypotheses about causation and effect. Given this framework, it is impossible to conclude that emotional abuse leads to difficulties with emotion control, which, in turn, contributes to interpersonal violence. |