198 results on '"Slep, Amy M. Smith"'
Search Results
152. Do Child Abuse and Interparental Violence Lead to Adulthood Family Violence?
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Heyman, Richard E., primary and Slep, Amy M. Smith, additional
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- 2002
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153. The Hazards of Predicting Divorce Without Crossvalidation
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Heyman, Richard E., primary and Slep, Amy M. Smith, additional
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- 2001
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154. Justification of Jealous and Coercive Tactics Scale
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Slep, Amy M. Smith, primary, Cascardi, Michele, additional, Avery-Leaf, Sarah, additional, and O'Leary, K. Daniel, additional
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- 2001
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155. Attitudes about Aggression in Dating Situations Scales
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Slep, Amy M. Smith, primary, Cascardi, Michele, additional, Avery-Leaf, Sarah, additional, and O'Leary, K. Daniel, additional
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- 2001
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156. Modified Attitudes Towards Interpersonal Violence Scale
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Slep, Amy M. Smith, primary, Cascardi, Michele, additional, Avery-Leaf, Sarah, additional, and O'Leary, K. Daniel, additional
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- 2001
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157. Hazardous Alcohol Use and Intimate Partner Violence in the Military: Understanding Protective Factors.
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Foran, Heather M., Heyman, Richard E., Slep, Amy M. Smith, and Snarr, Jeffery D.
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The article presents a study which examines protective factors in hazardous alcohol use and intimate partner violence (IPV) in active duty (AD) members of the U.S. Air Force (AF). The study performs Community Assessment (CA) survey with demographic questions, quantitative items, and scales to measure individual, family, and community factors. Results show that maturation, improved community safety, and better relationship can weaken the link between hazardous alcohol use and IPV.
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- 2012
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158. Risk for Suicidal Ideation in the U.S. Air Force: An Ecological Perspective.
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Langhinrichsen-Rohling, Jennifer, Snarr, Jeffery D., Slep, Amy M. Smith, Heyman, Richard E., and Foran, Heather M.
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SUICIDAL ideation ,SUICIDE risk factors ,SUICIDE prevention ,SELF-destructive behavior - Abstract
Objective: Suicidal members of the U.S. military often fail to disclose their suicidal urges and behaviors. Military suicide prevention efforts may therefore be enhanced if they also target less stigmatized psychosocial factors that may decrease risk of suicidality. In keeping with Bronfenbrenner's (1977, 1994) model, this study simultaneously examined 4 ecological levels (i.e., individual, family, workplace, and community) of factors variously associated with increased or decreased risk for suicidal ideation. Method: Active-duty U.S. Air Force members (N = 52,780; 79.3% male; 79.2% non-Hispanic White; mean age = 31.78 years, SD = 7.38) completed the 2006 Community Assessment survey (a biennial, anonymous survey conducted at 82 U.S. Air Force bases worldwide), including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (2008) 5-item measure of past-year suicidality along with scales assessing an array of potential predictors. Results: The 1-year rate of suicidal ideation, defined as (a) more than rarely thinking about suicide or (b) ever seriously considering suicide, was approximately 4%. In multivariate models, for men and women, individual- (depressive symptoms and alcohol problems), family- (relationship satisfaction and intimate partner victimization), workplace- (hours worked), and community-level (social support) variables were retained in the final model. However, some sex differences in retained predictors were noted (e.g., men: dissatisfaction with the U.S. Air Force way of life; women: workplace relationship satisfaction and financial stressors). Conclusions: Addressing depressive symptoms and alcohol use, facilitating healthy relationship functioning, and increasing job satisfaction and social support may aid military suicide prevention efforts. These findings illustrate the importance of attending to multiple levels of potential influence when designing integrated suicide prevention and intervention programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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159. Prevalences of Intimate Partner Violence in a Representative U.S. Air Force Sample.
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Foran, Heather M., Slep, Amy M. Smith, and Heyman, Richard E.
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INTIMATE partner violence , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *RISK of violence , *PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Objective: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious health concern, but little is known about prevalence of IPV in the armed forces, as military members cope with the pressures of long-standing operations. Furthermore, previous prevalence studies have been plagued by definitional issues; most studies have focused on acts of aggression without consideration of impact (clinically significant [CS] IPV). This is the first large-scale study to examine prevalences of IPV, CS-IPV, and clinically significant emotional abuse (CS-EA) for men and women. Method: A United States Air Force-wide anonymous survey was administered across 82 bases in 2006 {N = 42,744) to assess IPV, CS-IPV, and CS-EA. Results: The adjusted prevalence of CS-IPV perpetration was 4.66% for men and 3.54% for women. Prevalences of IPV perpetration were 12.90% for men and 15.14% for women. CS-EA victimization was 6.00% for men and 8.50% for women. Sociodemographic differences in risk for violence were found for gender, race/ethnicity, pay grade, religious faith, marital status, and career type even after controlling for other demographic variables. Conclusions: Partner maltreatment is widespread in military (and civilian) samples. Men were more likely to perpetrate CS-IPV, whereas women were more likely to perpetrate IPV. Specific demographic risk factors were identified for different types of partner maltreatment (e.g., lower rank predicted higher risk for both perpetration and victimization across men and women). Other sociodemographic differences varied across severity (IPV vs. CS-IPV) and across gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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160. Evidence-Based Substantiation Criteria: Improving the Reliability of Field Decisions of Child Maltreatment and Partner Abuse.
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Heyman, Richard E., Collins, Pamela S., Slep, Amy M. Smith, and Knickerbocker, Lauren
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This research was supported by U.S. Air Force/U.S. Department of Agriculture Contract CR 19191-428142. Development of the DSM-formatted criteria sets was supported by a grant from the Fetzer Institute. The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the U.S. Government, the Department of Defense, or the Department of the Air Force. This project would not have been possible without the dedication and devotion of those at headquarters Air Force. This project Family Advocacy (especially Lt. Cols. Dari Tritt and James Whitworth and Maj. David Linkh) and the Family Advocacy employees and active duty members worldwide who participated in tire trials and surveys discussed in this article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
161. Reliability of Family Maltreatment Diagnostic Criteria: 41 Site Dissemination Field Trial.
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Heyman, Richard E. and Slep, Amy M. Smith
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INTIMATE partner violence , *CHILD abuse , *PARENT-child relationships , *DOMESTIC violence , *FAMILY relations , *SEX crimes - Abstract
R. E. Heyman and A. M. S. Slep (2006) developed and conducted an effectiveness trial of a diagnostic system for child and partner maltreatment. The current investigation tested the widespread dissemination of the diagnostic system at 41 child and partner maltreatment services sites (n = 549 partner maltreatment cases and n = 342 child maltreatment cases). Agreement between field and master reviewers' decisions was good for partner physical and emotional abuse (K = 0.83-0.84). Agreement was also good for child physical, emotional, and sexual abuse (K = 0.73-0.89) but lagged slightly for child neglect (K = 0.66). Thus, multifaceted and content valid family maltreatment diagnostic criteria can be disseminated reliably. Replication studies of interrater agreement of the diagnostic system in typical clinical and agency settings are necessary; however, the high levels of agreement in myriad field sites imply that consistency of maltreatment determinations is achievable in widespread use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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162. Analogue Methods
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Heyman, Richard E., primary and Slep, Amy M. Smith, additional
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163. Observational Methods
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Heyman, Richard E., primary and Slep, Amy M. Smith, additional
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164. Changes in Relationship Satisfaction Across the Transition to Parenthood: A Meta-Analysis.
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Mitnick, Danielle M., Heyman, Richard E., and Slep, Amy M. Smith
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PARENTHOOD , *FAMILY relations , *META-analysis , *PARENTING , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
The U.S. government has recently spent several hundred million dollars to promote healthy relationships in new parents. The influx of money implies that relationships of new parents are at elevated risk for declining satisfaction and dissolution. This meta-analysis aggregates data from 37 studies that track couples from pregnancy to after the birth of the first child and 4 studies that track childless newlywed couples over time and compare couples who do and do not become parents. Results indicate significant, small declines in relationship satisfaction for both men and women from pregnancy to 11 months postbirth; 5 studies that followed couples for 12-14 months found moderate-sized declines. Seven variables moderated the decrease in relationship satisfaction from pregnancy to early parenthood. However, the decrease in satisfaction may not indicate anything unique about the transition to parenthood; the 4 studies following newlyweds indicated that those who do not become parents experience a decrease in relationship satisfaction similar to that of parents across a comparable span of time. Implications for prevention and future directions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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165. Dissemination of a reliable and valid family maltreatment determination model: 33-site, system-wide replication and extension of Heyman and Slep (2009a).
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Zaninovic V, Heyman RE, Drew AL, Slep AMS, Lapshina N, Neglio B, Rhoades KA, and Daly KA
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The need for standardized criteria in partner and child maltreatment response systems is critical for providing fair decisions, allocating family support, producing reliable research findings, and aiding prevention efforts, among other tasks. The primary goal of this study was to replicate Heyman and Slep's (see record 2009-23534-017) study-whether maltreatment incident determination committee decisions of local sites matched those of master reviewers. This study extended the prior work by testing if specific training techniques (i.e., social worker self-assessments, motivation-enhanced briefs, per-case feedback) increased the master reviewer-site concordance of the Field-Tested Assessment, Intervention-Planning, and Response (FAIR) system. Overall agreement between the master reviewers and the committees was 87%, indicating good agreement but falling just below the 91%-92% achieved in earlier FAIR dissemination studies. Sites were randomly assigned to one of eight training conditions using a multiphase optimization strategy design. The full factorial model was not statistically significant, indicating that the training techniques were not associated with committees' voting fidelity. The replicated agreement findings indicate that the FAIR system can be implemented successfully on a large scale and produce consistently good agreement on family maltreatment case decisions. Areas for future research are discussed (e.g., testing and usage of evidence-informed training techniques). (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2025
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166. Associations among psychological health problems, intimate-relationship problems, and suicidal ideation among United States Air Force active-duty personnel.
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Parsons AM, Slep AMS, Heyman RE, Kim S, Mitnick D, Lorko K, Gupta A, Balderrama-Durbin C, Cigrang JA, and Snyder DK
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Linkages among psychological health problems, intimate relationship distress, and suicide risk have been widely studied, but less is known about how these factors interact, especially in military populations. With steady increases in suicide rates among active military and post-service members (SMs), it is critical to better understand the relation among known risk factors. The current study addresses this gap by testing a model hypothesizing that the association between intimate-relationship problems and suicidal ideation is mediated by individual mental health symptoms. We tested this model on a sample of 862 active-duty Air Force members in committed relationships. The sample consisted of 35.0% women and 64.8% men, with an average age of 21.9 years and a mean relationship length of 2.8 years. Findings supported the hypothesized statistical mediation model. Results indicated that relationship problems contribute to psychological health problems, which, in turn, are related to suicidal ideation. These findings may help direct suicide intervention and prevention protocols that consider intimate relationship distress as a significant risk factor. Limitations and further implications for policies regarding suicide prevention in the armed forces are discussed.
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- 2024
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167. A Response to Smith et al.
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Segura A, Heyman RE, Ochshorn J, and Slep AMS
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- 2024
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168. Still "Don't Ask" more than a decade later: The impact of research barriers for LGB+ military couples.
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Balderrama-Durbin C, Cigrang JA, Snyder DK, Gupta A, Slep AMS, Heyman RE, Parsons AM, Simonson J, Lindahl KM, and Pound L
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Despite the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT) over a decade ago, military processes and policies continue to function as significant structural and institutional barriers to research aimed at optimizing resources for military couples and families with marginalized sexual identities. Such research is essential given the apparent mental health and related disparities among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and those with other marginalized sexual identities (LGB+) active-duty service members (SMs), as well as the absence of appropriately tailored resources to support these members of the military community. In this paper, we review the empirical literature on the experiences and psychological health of LGB+ military couples, revealing severe limitations in our understanding of these diverse military romantic partnerships. We illuminate process-related barriers to conducting this essential research through an illustrative case example. Our review concludes with specific recommendations for reform and advocacy distinguished by coordinated efforts inclusive of all five military branches, policymakers, military leaders, researchers, and LGB+ stakeholders.
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- 2024
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169. Revisiting "ill will versus poor skill": Relationship dissatisfaction, intimate partner violence, and observed "communication skills deficits".
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Heyman RE, Slep AMS, Giresi J, and Baucom KJW
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- Humans, Sexual Behavior, Hostility, Communication, Sexual Partners psychology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology
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For decades, researchers, interventionists, and the lay public have subscribed to the notion that couples low in relationship satisfaction and/or experiencing psychological, physical, or sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) have communication skills deficits. In contrast, experimental studies of communication have concluded that differences were more likely due to partners' "ill will than poor skill." We revisited this debate by recruiting a fairly generalizable sample of couples (N = 291) via random-digit dialing and asking them to discuss two top conflict areas ("at your best" and "as you typically do"), thus measuring will-conscious inhibition of hostility and negative reciprocity and production of positivity (i.e., the "conflict triad"). The conflict triad was observed with the Rapid Marital Interaction Coding System, Second Generation. We found partial support for the hypotheses grounded in Finkel's I
3 meta-model. Frequency of hostility was associated with a complicated satisfaction × IPV-extent × conversation type × gender interaction, indicating that couples' communication skills are multi-determined. Unhappier couples showed almost no change in positivity when at their best, whereas happier couples nearly doubled their positivity despite their considerably higher typical positivity mean. Negative reciprocity was associated with satisfaction and IPV-extent but not conversation type, implying that immediate instigation combined with risk factors overwhelms conscious inhibition. Intervention implications are discussed., (© 2022 Family Process Institute.)- Published
- 2023
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170. Psychological maltreatment: An operationalized definition and path toward application.
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Slep AMS, Glaser D, and Manly JT
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- Child, Humans, Child Welfare, Caregivers, Mental Health, Child Abuse psychology
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Psychological maltreatment (PM) of children has been difficult to define and even more challenging to operationalize consistently. This fact contributes to child PM being under-recognized and under-addressed by professionals that interact with children with mental health, behavioral, and developmental issues; and by systems such as child welfare, clinical and judicial systems. In this paper, we propose a definition of child PM that is both overarching and operationalized in a manner that will support consistent, fair, and unbiased application in applied contexts. The operationalized definition delineates the nature of caregiver acts that can amount to PM, as well as the level of experienced and potential impact of said act (s) that constitute PM. We detail our rationale for the definition. We discuss the need for field trials to establish the utility of the definition. We explain the necessary training and systems that would be required for the definition to be consistently and accurately applied. We believe that this definition has the potential to substantially enhance systems' abilities to recognize and address child PM, and thereby enhance children's and families' wellbeing., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2022
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171. Prevention System Implementation and Reach: Attitudes and Environmental Predictors in a Randomized Controlled Trial of the NORTH STAR Prevention System.
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Rhoades KA, Slep AMS, Lorber MF, Heyman RE, Eddy JM, and Linkh DJ
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- Attitude, Leadership
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Although many evidence-based interventions are well-established, our understanding of how to effectively implement and sustain those interventions in real-world settings is less well understood. We investigated predictors of implementation and reach in a randomized controlled trial of the NORTH STAR prevention system. One-third of U.S. Air Force (AF) bases worldwide were randomly assigned to NORTH STAR (n = 12) or an assessment-and-feedback-only condition (n = 12). Process data regarding implementation factors were collected from Community Action Team (CAT) members and observations of CAT processes. Results from a series of regression analyses indicated that change in leadership and community support, action planning processes, and perceived approach effectiveness from pre-action planning to follow-up predicted community action plan (CAP) implementation and that changes in barriers to implementation predicted CAP reach. Pre-action planning reports of CAT member self-efficacy and perceived approach effectiveness also predicted CAP implementation at 1-year follow-up. Future directions and practice recommendations are provided., (© 2022. Society for Prevention Research.)
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- 2022
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172. The role of intimate partner violence and relationship satisfaction in couples' interpersonal emotional arousal.
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Wojda AK, Baucom DH, Weber DM, Heyman RE, and Slep AMS
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- Arousal, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Men, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Personal Satisfaction
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To inform interpersonal models of intimate partner violence (IPV), the present study examines patterns of vocally encoded emotional arousal during the conversations of mixed-gender couples who reported on the extent of physical and psychological IPV and degree of relationship satisfaction ( N = 149). All couples completed two problem-solving discussions. Emotional arousal was measured continuously during each conversation using vocal fundamental frequency. Contrary to expectations, results demonstrated that trajectories of arousal differed based on gender, IPV, and relationship satisfaction. Within conversations, men demonstrated linear increases in arousal at higher levels of IPV, suggesting that men may either struggle to contain their emotions or use heightened emotional expression as a conflict strategy in relationships with more extensive IPV. Conversely, women exhibited different trajectories of arousal depending on the combinations of relationship satisfaction and couple IPV, except at higher levels of their own satisfaction. Specifically, when women reported being highly satisfied in their relationships, they demonstrated similarly shaped trajectories across all levels of IPV and men's satisfaction. Together, this suggests that women's higher relationship satisfaction may buffer their emotional expression, although this may not always be adaptive within the context of relationships with extensive IPV. Overall, this study offers insight into the dynamic interpersonal processes linked with relationship distress and IPV and implies the need for a more nuanced, interpersonal research agenda for IPV research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
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173. Impact of expectation violation on relationship satisfaction across the transition to parenthood.
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Mitnick DM, Heyman RE, Slep AMS, Giresi J, and Shanley JE
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- Female, Humans, Infant, Parents, Pregnancy, Motivation, Personal Satisfaction
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This study examined whether violations of partner expectations-and attributions and perceptions of these violations-are associated with relationship satisfaction across the transition to parenthood. First-time parents ( N = 99) mixed-sex couples completed mail-in packets during pregnancy (Time 1; T1) and when their babies were 3-5 months old (Time 2; T2). Hypotheses were largely confirmed. Multilevel modeling results indicated a significant T1-to-T2 decrease in relationship satisfaction. Expectation violations significantly predicted change in satisfaction; undermet expectations are associated with decreased satisfaction. T2 perception of expectation confirmation predicted change in satisfaction at T2 and moderated the relationship between expectation violation and relationship satisfaction. Likewise, benign postnatal attributions were significantly associated with the change in satisfaction at T2 and moderated the relationship between expectation violation and relationship satisfaction. Clinical and research implications are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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174. Evaluating the Effectiveness of NORTH STAR: a Community-Based Framework to Reduce Adult Substance Misuse, Intimate Partner Violence, Child Abuse, Suicidality, and Cumulative Risk.
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Slep AMS, Heyman RE, Lorber MF, Baucom KJW, and Linkh DJ
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Risk Assessment, Young Adult, Child Abuse prevention & control, Community Networks, Health Promotion standards, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
We evaluated the effectiveness of NORTH STAR, a community assessment, planning, and action framework to reduce the prevalence of several secretive adult problems (hazardous drinking, controlled prescription drug misuse, suicidality, and clinically significant intimate partner violence and child abuse [both emotional and physical]) as well as cumulative risk. One-third of US Air Force (AF) bases worldwide were randomly assigned to NORTH STAR (n = 12) or an assessment-and-feedback-only condition (n = 12). Two AF-wide, cross-sectional, anonymous, web-based surveys were conducted of randomly selected samples assessing risk/protective factors and outcomes. Process data regarding attitudes, context, and implementation factors were also collected from Community Action Team members. Analyzed at the level of individuals, NORTH STAR significantly reduced intimate partner emotional abuse, child physical abuse, and suicidality, at sites with supportive conditions for community prevention (i.e., moderation effects). Given its relatively low cost, use of empirically supported light-touch interventions, and emphasis on sustainability with existing resources, NORTH STAR may be a useful framework for the prevention of a range of adult behavioral health problems that are difficult to impact.
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- 2020
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175. A Randomized, Controlled Trial of the Impact of the Couple CARE for Parents of Newborns Program on the Prevention of Intimate Partner Violence and Relationship Problems.
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Heyman RE, Slep AMS, Lorber MF, Mitnick DM, Xu S, Baucom KJW, Halford WK, and Niolon PH
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Young Adult, Interpersonal Relations, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, Parents
- Abstract
Effective, accessible prevention programs are needed for adults at heightened risk for intimate partner violence (IPV). This parallel group randomized controlled trial examines whether such couples receiving the American version of Couple CARE for Parents of Newborns (CCP; Halford et al. 2009) following the birth of a child, compared with controls, report fewer first occurrences of clinically significant IPV, less frequent physical and psychological IPV, and improved relationship functioning. Further, we test whether intervention effects are moderated by level of risk for IPV. Couples at elevated risk for IPV (N = 368) recruited from maternity units were randomized to CCP (n = 188) or a 24-month waitlist (n = 180) and completed measures of IPV and relationship functioning at baseline, post-program (when child was 8 months old), and two follow-ups (at 15 and 24 months). Intervention effects were tested using intent to treat (ITT) as well as complier average causal effect (CACE; Jo and Muthén 2001) structural equation models. CCP did not significantly prevent clinically significant IPV nor were there significant main effects of CCP on clinically significant IPV, frequency of IPV, or most relationship outcomes in the CACE or ITT analyses. Risk moderated the effect of CCP on male-to-female physical IPV at post-program, with couples with a planned pregnancy declining, but those with unplanned pregnancies increasing. This study adds to previous findings that prevention programs for at-risk couples are not often effective and may even be iatrogenic for some couples.
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- 2019
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176. A case-controlled field study evaluating ICD-11 proposals for relational problems and intimate partner violence.
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Heyman RE, Kogan CS, Foran HM, Burns SC, Slep AMS, Wojda AK, Keeley JW, Rebello TJ, and Reed GM
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Background/Objective: Intimate partner relationship problems and intimate partner abuse and neglect - referred to in this paper as "relational problems and maltreatment" - have substantial and well-documented impact on both physical and mental health. However, classification guidelines, such as those found in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10), are vague and unlikely to support consistent application. Revised guidelines proposed for ICD-11 are much more operationalized. We used standardized clinical vignette conditions with an international panel of clinicians to test if ICD-11 changes resulted in improved classification accuracy. Method: English-speaking mental health professionals ( N = 738) from 65 nations applied ICD-10 or ICD-11 (proposed) guidelines with experimentally manipulated case presentations of presence or absence of (a) individual mental health diagnoses and (b) relational problems or maltreatment. Results: ICD-11, compared with ICD-10, guidelines resulted in significantly better classification accuracy, although only in the presence of co-morbid mental health problems. Clinician factors (e. g., gender, language, world region) largely did not impact classification performance. Conclusions: Despite being considerably more explicated, raters' performance with ICD-11 guidelines reveals training issues that should be addressed prior to the release of ICD-11 in 2018 (e. g., overriding the guidelines with pre-existing archetypes for relationship problems and physical and psychological abuse).
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- 2018
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177. The reliability paradox of the Parent-Child Conflict Tactics Corporal Punishment Subscale.
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Lorber MF and Slep AMS
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- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Psychometrics instrumentation, Reproducibility of Results, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Psychometrics standards, Punishment psychology
- Abstract
In the present investigation we consider and explain an apparent paradox in the measurement of corporal punishment with the Parent-Child Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS-PC): How can it have poor internal consistency and still be reliable? The CTS-PC was administered to a community sample of 453 opposite sex couples who were parents of 3- to 7-year-old children. Internal consistency was marginal, yet item response theory analyses revealed that reliability rose sharply with increasing corporal punishment, exceeding .80 in the upper ranges of the construct. The results suggest that the CTS-PC Corporal Punishment subscale reliably discriminates among parents who report average to high corporal punishment (64% of mothers and 56% of fathers in the present sample), despite low overall internal consistency. These results have straightforward implications for the use and reporting of the scale. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
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178. Parental Flooding During Conflict: A Psychometric Evaluation of a New Scale.
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Del Vecchio T, Lorber MF, Slep AM, Malik J, Heyman RE, and Foran HM
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- Adult, Affect, Child, Child, Preschool, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Parenting psychology, Psychological Tests, Psychometrics, Punishment psychology, Reproducibility of Results, Family Conflict psychology, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Parents who are overwhelmed by the intensity and aversive nature of child negative affect - those who are experiencing flooding - may be less likely to react effectively and instead may focus on escaping the aversive situation, disciplining either overly permissively or punitively to escape quickly from child negative affect. However, there are no validated self-report measures of the degree to which parents experience flooding, impeding the exploration of these relations. Thus, we created and evaluated the Parent Flooding scale (PFS), assessing the extent to which parents believe their children's negative affect during parent-child conflicts is unexpected, overwhelming and distressing. We studied its factorial validity, reliability, and concurrent validity in a community sample of 453 couples with 3- to 7-year-old children (51.9 % girls) recruited via random digit dialing. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated a one-factor solution with excellent internal consistency. Test-retest stability over an average of 5.6 months was high. Concurrent validity was suggested by the associations of flooding with parents' aggression toward their children, overreactive and lax discipline, parenting satisfaction, and parents' anger, as well as with child externalizing behavior and negative affect. Incrementally concurrent validity analyses indicated that flooding was a unique predictor of mothers' and fathers' overreactive discipline and fathers' parent-child aggression and lax discipline, over and above the contributions of parents' anger and children's negative affect. The present results support the psychometric validity of the PFS.
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- 2016
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179. Parents' experience of flooding in discipline encounters: Associations with discipline and interplay with related factors.
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Lorber MF, Mitnick DM, and Slep AM
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Child Behavior psychology, Emotions, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
In family psychology, the term flooding refers to the feeling of being overwhelmed by a family member's behavior in a manner that undermines an organized response. In the present investigation we first aimed to clarify the role of flooding in overreactive and lax discipline. The second study aim was to more fully establish the position of parental flooding in its nomological network given the relative paucity of research on parental flooding. Maternal discipline and physiological responses, as well as child behavior, were observed in laboratory discipline encounters with 97 mother-toddler dyads. Mothers then rated the extent to which they experienced flooding in response to their children's behavior and emotion displays during the immediately preceding discipline encounters. Mothers' experience of negative emotion was assessed via video-mediated recall. Flooding was positively associated with both overreactive and lax discipline; this association did not reflect confounding by mothers' experience of negative emotion. Flooding was further associated with mothers' experienced negative emotion and heart rate reactivity, as well as child misbehavior and negative emotion displays. The flooding-overreactive discipline association was concentrated in those mothers who exhibited greater increases in heart rate and greater vagal withdrawal, and whose children misbehaved more during the discipline encounter. The present results suggest the incremental validity of flooding in predicting discipline practices, as well as the strong fit of flooding in its nomological network. Parents' self-recognition of flooding may ultimately prove useful in parenting interventions as a signal to trigger compensatory techniques. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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180. Help-seeking among airmen in distressed relationships: Promoting relationship well-being.
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Snyder DK, Balderrama-Durbin C, Cigrang JA, Talcott GW, Slep AM, and Heyman RE
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- Family Characteristics, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Iraq War, 2003-2011, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Social Stigma, Spouses statistics & numerical data, United States, Veterans psychology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Military Personnel psychology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Sexual Partners psychology, Spouses psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Although a substantial proportion of service members returning from a combat deployment report individual emotional and behavioral disorders as well as intimate relationship difficulties, previous studies indicate that only a minority actually seek mental health services. Little is known about factors that predict help-seeking in this population. We first review key findings from the literature on help-seeking in military and veteran populations, including mixed findings regarding the role of perceived stigma and attitudes toward mental health treatment. We then present data from a longitudinal study of United States Air Force Security Forces following a year-long high-risk deployment to Iraq-including findings regarding who seeks help, for what problems, and from which providers. We also examine whether these findings differ for Airmen in a married or committed relationship versus nonpartnered Airmen and, for the former group, whether findings differ for those in a distressed versus nondistressed relationship. Finally, we discuss implications of these findings for extending couple-based interventions to service members and veterans, and describe a multitiered "stepped" approach for promoting relationship resiliency., ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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181. The emergence and evolution of infant externalizing behavior.
- Author
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Lorber MF, Del Vecchio T, and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Young Adult, Aggression psychology, Child Development physiology, Family Conflict psychology, Infant Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Problem Behavior psychology
- Abstract
In the present investigation, we examined the developmental viability of the externalizing behavior construct spanning the period from 8 to 24 months of age. A sample of 274 psychologically aggressive couples was recruited from hospital maternity wards and followed from childbirth through 24 months of age. Mothers and fathers completed questionnaire measures of infant physical aggression, defiance, activity level, and distress to limitations at 8, 15, and 24 months. The developmental viability of externalizing behavior at each age studied was suggested by several results. Physical aggression, defiance, activity level, and distress to limitations reflected the operation of a single underlying externalizing behavior factor. In some cases, these individual facets of externalizing behavior became more strongly associated with one another over time. The externalizing construct exhibited remarkable longitudinal stability, with the stability of physical aggression and defiance increasing with age. The externalizing behavior construct was concurrently and prospectively associated with several factors in its nomological network (e.g., interparental conflict and poor parental bond with the infant). Our findings suggest that externalizing behaviors coalesce into a psychologically meaningful construct by 8 months of infant life. Researchers who seek to chart the emergence of the externalizing behavior construct may now need to look to earlier months.
- Published
- 2015
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182. Are persistent early onset child conduct problems predicted by the trajectories and initial levels of discipline practices?
- Author
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Lorber MF and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Conduct Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mothers psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child Behavior psychology, Parenting psychology, Problem Behavior psychology, Punishment psychology
- Abstract
In the present investigation we focused on 2 broad sets of questions: Do parental overreactivity, laxness, and corporal punishment show evidence of normative change in early to middle childhood? Are persistently elevated child conduct problems (CPs) associated with deviations from normative changes in, as well as high initial levels of, discipline practices? Four hundred fifty-three couples with 3- to 7-year-old children were recruited via random digit dialing and studied at 3 annual assessments. Parents completed questionnaire measures of all study constructs. Normative declines were found in maternal corporal punishment and laxness. Maternal overreactivity showed a normative increase. For fathers, only corporal punishment showed evidence of a normative decline. The declines in mothers' corporal punishment and laxness, and in fathers' corporal punishment, exhibited little variability. In contrast, the trajectories of maternal overreactivity were significantly variable. High-increasing CPs were more common than low-stable CPs in families with greater increases in maternal overreactivity. High-increasing CPs were also more common in families with greater initial maternal overreactivity and corporal punishment. Yet in no case did discipline practices significantly distinguish children on high-increasing versus high-decreasing CPs trajectories. In tests of alternative models, child effects were found for all parenting variables, suggesting reciprocal causation. The findings are discussed relative to etiological models of CPs and implications for preventive intervention., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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183. Coming home: A prospective study of family reintegration following deployment to a war zone.
- Author
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Balderrama-Durbin C, Cigrang JA, Osborne LJ, Snyder DK, Talcott GW, Slep AM, Heyman RE, Tatum J, Baker M, Cassidy D, and Sonnek S
- Subjects
- Adult, Family Conflict psychology, Female, Humans, Iraq War, 2003-2011, Male, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Social Adjustment, Social Support, United States, Young Adult, Alcoholism psychology, Family Relations psychology, Military Personnel psychology
- Abstract
The consequences of deployment extend beyond the service member to impact the entire family. The current investigation evaluated the unique challenges of family reintegration for partnered service members using a prospective design. In total, 76 partnered service members who deployed on a year-long, high-risk mission to Iraq were assessed across the entirety of the deployment cycle, i.e., pre-, during, and postdeployment. At follow-up, nearly 1 in 5 partnered service members reported moderate to severe difficulties in multiple aspects of family reintegration. Prospective interpersonal indicators such as preparations for deployment as a couple, shared commitment to the military, and predeployment relationship distress predicted postdeployment family reintegration difficulties. Significant interpersonal risk factors were medium to large in their effect sizes. Airmen's willingness to disclose deployment- and combat-related experiences, and postdeployment relationship distress served as concurrent interpersonal correlates of difficulties with family reintegration. Intrapersonal factors, including posttraumatic stress symptoms and alcohol misuse were concurrently related to challenges with family reintegration; predeployment alcohol misuse also predicted subsequent family reintegration difficulties. Additional analyses indicated that pre- and postdeployment relationship distress, combat disclosure, and postdeployment alcohol misuse each contributed to family reintegration when controlling for other intra- and interpersonal risk factors. Implications for prevention and early intervention strategies as well as future research are discussed., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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184. Infant externalizing behavior as a self-organizing construct.
- Author
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Lorber MF, Del Vecchio T, and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Child Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Child Behavior Disorders physiopathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Maternal Behavior, Mother-Child Relations, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychology, Child, Aggression, Infant Behavior physiology, Internal-External Control, Motor Activity
- Abstract
We evaluated the extent to which the externalizing behavior construct is self-organizing in the first 2 years of life. Based on dynamic systems theory, we hypothesized that changes in physical aggression, defiance, activity level, and distress to limitations would each be predicted by earlier manifestations of one another. These hypotheses were evaluated via mothers' and fathers' reports of 274 infants' externalizing behaviors at 8, 15, and 24 months of child age. Eight-month measures of physical aggression, activity level, and/or distress to limitations explained increases in physical aggression, defiance, activity level, and distress to limitations from 8 to 15 months. Increases in defiance and activity level from 15 to 24 months were predicted by 15-month physical aggression and/or distress to limitations. These findings suggest that the externalizing behavior construct is formed by dynamic interplay among its individual elements, particularly between 8 and 15 months., ((PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2014
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185. Biological sensitivity to context in couples: why partner aggression hurts some more than others.
- Author
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Lorber MF, Erlanger AC, and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Crime Victims, Depression psychology, Family Characteristics, Female, Humans, Male, Parenting psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Aggression psychology, Emotions physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Parents psychology, Sexual Partners psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stressors was investigated as (a) a moderator of associations of partner aggression with affective functioning, alcohol problems, and parenting; and (b) a consequence of partner aggression., Method: Cohabiting adult couples (N = 453) with 3- to 7-year-old children were recruited by random digit dialing and completed questionnaires assessing couple physical aggression, discipline practices, anger, stress, depressive symptoms, and problem alcohol use. Heart rate and blood pressure were measured at rest and in response to laboratory stressors (mental arithmetic and video presentations of family conflict)., Results: Males' physical aggression more strongly predicted women's affective functioning and alcohol problems when the women had greater cardiovascular reactivity. This pattern did not extend to men. Physical victimization was associated with lower cardiovascular reactivity., Conclusions: The present results provide partial support for the biological sensitivity to context model of Boyce and Ellis (2005) and suggest that incorporating the moderating influence of biological reactivity may improve the precision of models of the effects of aggression on adult adjustment.
- Published
- 2013
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186. Prevention of partner violence by focusing on behaviors of both young males and females.
- Author
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O'Leary KD and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Community Mental Health Services, Crime Victims psychology, Domestic Violence psychology, Female, Gender Identity, Humans, Male, Psychology, Child, Risk-Taking, Sex Factors, Aggression psychology, Domestic Violence prevention & control, Health Behavior, Preventive Medicine, Psychology, Adolescent
- Abstract
Historically, the political context of partner physical aggression policy and research has focused on protection of physically victimized women and mandated interventions for male batterers. This emphasis is understandable when one considers the injuries and deaths of women by men. However, physical aggression against partners among teens is a very different phenomenon than battering. Intimate partner violence (IPV) in the form of physical aggression, the focus of this review, often starts in junior high school, and approximately 35% of male and female senior high school students report engaging in IPV. The specific trajectory of IPV varies by sample, but IPV appears to decrease in the late teens or early 20s. IPV is generally reported by both males and females, and not attributable to self-defense. IPV is significantly stable in couples who remain together, but stability appears lower if partners change. Given the importance of physical aggression by both males and females, prevention and early intervention programs need to address relationship factors, and targeted prevention and early intervention would be prudent with young high-risk couples. Decades of intervention programs for batterers have not proven very successful, and IPV appears easier to prevent than treat. Thus, emphasis on prevention of IPV seems both timely and promising. This review is intended for diverse audiences including educational administrators, policy makers, and researchers. It reviews issues such as who and when to target for IPV prevention programs, and it summarizes data relevant to these issues.
- Published
- 2012
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187. Preventive impacts of reliable family maltreatment criteria.
- Author
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Snarr JD, Heyman RE, Slep AM, and Malik J
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Crime Victims, Domestic Violence prevention & control, Military Personnel psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The U.S. Air Force recently implemented system-wide changes that both (a) clarified the criteria used to determine when family maltreatment has occurred and (b) made the process by which these decisions are made more consistent. The current study examined the effects of these changes on family maltreatment recidivism., Method: Official records were obtained from the Air Force Family Advocacy Program. All cases decided during the last year of the old system and the first year of the new system at each base (total N = 14,298) were examined. For each incident, it was determined (a) whether the incident met criteria and (b) whether the same offender committed family maltreatment again within 1 year of the initial incident., Results: Overall substantiation rates were significantly lower (p = .003) under the new system (47%) than the old (56%). After the change, significant interaction effects were obtained for both alleged (b = -.51, p = .004) and substantiated (b = -.55, p = .015) reoffense, in that 1-year reoffense rates decreased significantly among initially substantiated cases but remained unchanged among initially unsubstantiated cases. Indeed, rates of substantiated reoffense by substantiated offenders were cut in half (from 14% to 7%)., Conclusions: Reductions in overall substantiation rates were most likely due to the use of more stringent criteria. The results of the recidivism analyses suggest that clear criteria and consistent decision processes can have secondary preventive effects on family maltreatment in their own right, possibly due to increases in informal community sanctions.
- Published
- 2011
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188. An initial evaluation of the role of emotion and impulsivity in explaining racial/ethnic differences in the use of corporal punishment.
- Author
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Lorber MF, O'Leary SG, and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Black or African American psychology, Attitude, Child, Child, Preschool, Depression epidemiology, Depression ethnology, Female, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Humans, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Surveys and Questionnaires, White People psychology, Emotions physiology, Ethnicity psychology, Impulsive Behavior ethnology, Impulsive Behavior psychology, Punishment psychology
- Abstract
The authors sought to provide an initial evaluation of the hypothesis that corporal punishment is less strongly associated with parental emotion and impulsivity among African American ("Black") in contrast to European American ("White") parents. White-Latino and Black-Latino differences in corporal punishment, emotion, and impulsivity were explored, given the lack of existing theory predicting group differences. Couples with 3- to 7-year-old children were recruited via random digit dialing, and the parents completed questionnaires and an analog parent-child conflict task in the laboratory. Group differences were tested pooling mothers and fathers via dyadic data analyses. Black parents (N = 57) had more positive attitudes toward and used more corporal punishment than White parents (N = 730). Latino American parents' (N = 78) views and use of corporal punishment were similar to those of White parents. By and large, associations of corporal punishment with parents' impulsivity and emotion did not significantly vary by race/ethnicity. The present findings, although preliminary, do not support the emotion-impulsivity hypothesis of racial differences in the use of corporal punishment suggested by K. Deater-Deckard, K. A. Dodge, J. E. Bates, and G. S. Pettit (1996).
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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189. Child emotional aggression and abuse: definitions and prevalence.
- Author
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Slep AM, Heyman RE, Snarr JD, Foster RE, Linkh DJ, and Whitworth JD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aggression, Child, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Parenting, Stress, Psychological, Child Abuse diagnosis, Child Welfare
- Abstract
Objective: Research on and intervention for child emotional abuse and emotional aggression toward children have been severely hampered because there have been no agreed-upon, clinically usable definitions., Methods: We have (a) proposed and field-tested a set of criteria to operationally define child emotional abuse for clinical settings and (b) used these criteria to design a parent-report measure of parental emotional aggression and child emotional abuse that could be used in research. In this paper, we review the development and field trials of these criteria for making substantiation decisions., Results: Agreement between master reviewers and field decisions was extremely high in a 5-site development trial (96% agreement, κ=.89) and a 41-site dissemination trial (90% agreement, κ=.73). We compare these criteria to other research criteria in the literature. We then present data collected using a self-report measure designed to parallel these criteria from an anonymous online survey of US Air Force personnel and their spouses. The final sample (N=52,780) was weighted to be representative of the United States civilian population. The prevalence of parents' emotionally aggressive acts was much higher than the prevalence of emotional abuse (acts plus impact), but rates of parents' acts of emotional aggression were lower than those typically reported in the literature. Additional analyses tested for differential effects due to gender of perpetrator (i.e., mothers or fathers), age of victim, and clustering within families. These factors did not drive rates of aggression or abuse., Conclusions: In sum, the criteria developed and proposed appear to support reliable clinical decision making regarding child emotional abuse and can be translated to research survey tools that better capture the continuum of parents' emotional aggression and child emotional abuse than the measures that are currently available, advancing the state of the science with respect to child emotional abuse., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
190. Hazardous drinking and military community functioning: identifying mediating risk factors.
- Author
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Foran HM, Heyman RE, and Slep AMS
- Subjects
- Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Alcoholic Intoxication prevention & control, Alcoholism prevention & control, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Personal Satisfaction, Risk Factors, Risk-Taking, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Alcoholic Intoxication psychology, Alcoholism psychology, Military Personnel psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Hazardous drinking is a serious societal concern in military populations. Efforts to reduce hazardous drinking among military personnel have been limited in effectiveness. There is a need for a deeper understanding of how community-based prevention models apply to hazardous drinking in the military. Community-wide prevention efforts may be most effective in targeting community functioning (e.g., support from formal agencies, community cohesion) that impacts hazardous drinking via other proximal risk factors. The goal of the current study is to inform community-wide prevention efforts by testing a model of community functioning and mediating risk factors of hazardous drinking among active duty U.S. Air Force personnel., Method: A large, representative survey sample of U.S. Air Force active duty members (N = 52,780) was collected at 82 bases worldwide. Hazardous drinking was assessed with the widely used Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (Saunders, Aasland, Babor, de la Fuente, & Grant, 1993). A variety of individual, family, and community measures were also assessed. Structural equation modeling was used to test a hypothesized model of community functioning, mediating risk factors and hazardous drinking., Results: Depressive symptoms, perceived financial stress, and satisfaction with the U.S. Air Force were identified as significant mediators of the link between community functioning and hazardous drinking for men and women. Relationship satisfaction was also identified as a mediator for men., Conclusions: These results provide a framework for further community prevention research and suggest that prevention efforts geared at increasing aspects of community functioning (e.g., the U.S. Air Force Community Capacity model) may indirectly lead to reductions in hazardous drinking through other proximal risk factors.
- Published
- 2011
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191. Recent suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in a large-scale survey of the U.S. Air Force: prevalences and demographic risk factors.
- Author
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Snarr JD, Heyman RE, and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Confidence Intervals, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Odds Ratio, Prevalence, Racial Groups psychology, Religion, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, United States epidemiology, Military Personnel psychology, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
One-year prevalences of self-reported noteworthy suicidal ideation and nonfatal suicide attempts were assessed in a large sample of U.S. Air Force active duty members (N = 52,780). Participants completed the 2006 Community Assessment, which was conducted online. Over 3% of male and 5.5% of female participants reported having experienced noteworthy suicidal ideation during the previous year, and 8.7% of those with ideation reported a recent suicide attempt. Demographic factors predicting significantly increased risk for suicidal ideation included female gender, low rank, and non-Christian religious affiliation; unmarried men were also at increased risk. Groups that were at increased risk for nonfatal suicide attempts included low-ranking men and Hispanic women. Implications for prevention efforts are discussed.
- Published
- 2010
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192. Unique risk and protective factors for partner aggression in a large scale air force survey.
- Author
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Slep AM, Foran HM, Heyman RE, and Snarr JD
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Alcoholism epidemiology, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Internet, Male, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data, Personal Satisfaction, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Social Support, Socioeconomic Factors, Spouse Abuse psychology, Spouse Abuse statistics & numerical data, Time Factors, United States, Aggression, Military Personnel psychology, Spouse Abuse prevention & control
- Abstract
The objective of this study is to examine risk factors of physical aggression against a partner in a large representative Active Duty Air Force sample. A stratified sample of 128,950 United States Active Duty members were invited to participate in an Air Force-wide anonymous online survey across 82 bases. The final sample (N = 52,780) was weighted to be representative of the United States Air Force. Backward stepwise regression analyses were conducted to identify unique predictors of partner physical aggression perpetration within and across different ecological levels (individual, family, organization, and community levels). Relationship satisfaction, alcohol problems, financial stress, and number of years in the military were identified as unique predictors of men's and women's perpetration of violence against their partner across ecological levels. Parental status, support from neighbors, personal coping, and support from formal agencies also uniquely predicted men's but not women's perpetration of violence across ecological levels. This study identified specific risk factors of partner violence that may be targeted by prevention and intervention efforts aimed at different levels of impact (e.g., family interventions, community-wide programs).
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
193. Validation of a new self-report measure of parental attributions.
- Author
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Snarr JD, Slep AM, and Grande VP
- Subjects
- Adult, Aggression psychology, Anger, Child Behavior psychology, Child Behavior Disorders complications, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Child, Preschool, Conflict, Psychological, Depressive Disorder complications, Depressive Disorder psychology, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Family Relations, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Male, New York, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Personal Satisfaction, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Parenting psychology, Self Disclosure, Self-Assessment
- Abstract
Attributional theory and empirical evidence suggest that a tendency to make stable, global self-causal attributions for undesirable events is associated with negative outcomes. However, existing self-report measures of parental attributions do not account for the possibility that dysfunctional parent-causal attributions for child misbehavior might be important predictors of poor family functioning. To address these concerns, the authors developed and tested a new measure of both parent-causal and child-responsible attributions for child misbehavior in a sample of 453 community couples. Structural validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, internal consistency, and temporal stability of the new measure were examined. As expected, confirmatory factor analysis resulted in 2 factors, Child-Responsible (9 items) and Parent-Causal (7 items); the final model was cross-validated in a holdout sample. The final scale demonstrated adequate internal consistency (alphas = .81-.90), test-retest reliability (rs = .55-.76), and convergent and discriminant validity. Dysfunctional parent-causal and child-responsible attributions significantly predicted parental emotional problems, ineffective discipline, parent-child physical aggression, and low parenting satisfaction. Associations with parent-child aggression and parenting satisfaction were generally larger than with partner aggression and relationship satisfaction., (Copyright 2009 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2009
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194. A translational research orientation to family violence.
- Author
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Heyman RE and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Models, Psychological, Psychopathology standards, Research Design, Biomedical Research methods, Domestic Violence classification, Domestic Violence prevention & control, Evidence-Based Medicine
- Abstract
We discuss translational research and its application in family violence research by (a) discussing what translational research is, (b) describing a six-stage model of the translational research cycle, (c) pondering the implication of each stage for family maltreatment research, and (d) providing examples of areas ready for translational research relevant to family violence.
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
195. Validation of a self-report measure of unrealistic relationship expectations.
- Author
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Foran HM and Slep AMS
- Subjects
- Adult, Attitude, Child, Child Abuse diagnosis, Child Abuse psychology, Child Abuse statistics & numerical data, Child, Preschool, Cognition, Discriminant Analysis, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Marriage psychology, Marriage statistics & numerical data, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Personal Satisfaction, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Self Disclosure, Spouse Abuse psychology, Aggression psychology, Interpersonal Relations, Self-Assessment, Spouse Abuse diagnosis, Spouse Abuse statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Cognitive models of intimate partner aggression implicate maladaptive relationship beliefs as antecedents to aggression and targets for intervention. However, existing self-report measures of relationship beliefs have failed to differentiate aggressive and nonaggressive individuals, raising questions about their assessment of and role in understanding aggression. To address these concerns, the authors developed and tested a new measure of unrealistic relationship beliefs in a sample of 453 community couples. Structural validity, concurrent validity, discriminant validity, internal consistency, and temporal stability of the new measure were examined. The final scale demonstrated adequate internal consistency (alphas=.83-.84), test-retest reliability (rs=.68-.74), and concurrent validity (small to moderate associations with predicted variables). Unrealistic relationship beliefs significantly differentiated aggressive and nonaggressive men, and this association remained significant after the authors controlled for other related variables.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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196. Predicting inept discipline: The role of parental depressive symptoms, anger, and attributions.
- Author
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Leung DW and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Anger, Attitude, Child Behavior Disorders, Depression psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Relations among parents' psychological difficulties (i.e., depressive symptoms, overt anger), dysfunctional attributions for child misbehavior, and inept discipline were investigated in a representative community sample of 451 mothers and 449 fathers. Depressive symptoms and anger were hypothesized to relate to discipline via their link with parents' attributions. Path analyses revealed that depressive symptoms predicted parent-centered causal attributions (i.e., stable, global, and dispositional), which, in turn, related to laxness. Depressive symptoms also predicted child-centered responsibility attributions (i.e., controllable, intentional, and negative), which, in turn, related to overreactivity. Anger predicted overreactivity directly. The patterns of relations were similar for fathers and mothers. The importance of addressing parents' psychological difficulties and dysfunctional attributions in interventions for families with disruptive children is discussed., (Copyright 2006 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. Mothers' emotion dynamics and their relations with harsh and lax discipline: microsocial time series analyses.
- Author
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Lorber MF and Slep AM
- Subjects
- Child Behavior psychology, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Mother-Child Relations, Affect, Mothers psychology, Parenting
- Abstract
Hypotheses were tested about how moment-by-moment variation in mothers' negative emotion predicts harsh and lax discipline. Mother-toddler dyads interacted in a task designed to elicit challenging child behavior. Mothers viewed videotapes of their interactions and continuously rated their experienced emotion. Harsh discipline was associated with mothers' greater negative emotion intensity, greater dependence of mothers' emotion on toddlers' negative affect, and lower serial predictability of mothers' emotion. Laxness was also associated with greater emotion dependence on negative toddler affect and lower serial predictability but not with negative emotion intensity. The dependence of mothers' emotion on toddlers' rule violations was not associated with discipline. Dynamic emotion variables were not redundant with emotion intensity and therefore enhance our understanding of the role of emotion in discipline.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
198. Parent and partner violence in families with young children: rates, patterns, and connections.
- Author
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Slep AM and O'Leary SG
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Surveys and Questionnaires, Violence statistics & numerical data, Aggression, Family psychology, Parents psychology, Spouse Abuse psychology, Spouse Abuse statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
In this study, the authors assessed men's and women's partner and parent physical aggression among 453 representatively sampled families with young children. The prevalences of partner aggression and of severe parent aggression were higher than previously reported. Substantial rates of co-occurrence were found. Risk ratios and regression analyses indicated that connections between (a) husbands' and wives' partner aggression and (b) mothers' and fathers' parent aggression were especially strong. Patterns of co-occurrence pointed to the probable relative importance of family-level, in comparison with individual, predictors of aggression. Patterns of co-occurring violence are described in light of the theoretical literature. Implications for studying family violence in community samples are discussed., ((c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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