Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Description
Abstract Text
One of the most widely accepted ideas in the family violence literature is
that exposure to marital violence in one's youth increases the likelihood
of being a batterer or victim later in one's own adult intimate
relationships. Yet, little is known about the actual psychological and
interpersonal processes whereby violence is transmitted across
generations. This investigation is aimed at the detailed examination of
how marital violence is associated with specific behavioral, cognitive,
and emotional outcomes in children, and how these associations are
mediated by parent-child relationship variables, as well as by individual
characteristics of the parents and the child. Stage 1 of the study
assesses mother-father-child family units of 180 preschoolers and 180
preadolescents on three types of self-report measures: predisposing
marital conflict variables; child outcomes; and parent-child as well as
individual resources mediators. In Stage 2 of the study, half of the
original samples will return for direct observation of conflictual marital
interactions, conflictual parent-child interactions, and parentchild
teaching interactions. In addition, children of the preadolescent sample
will be presented with simulated conflict situations to evaluate their
cognitive and emotional reactions to family conflict. Stage 2 subjects
will be selected to directly compare families exhibiting evidence of: (a)
husband-to-wife violence; (b) high marital conflict but no physical
aggression; and (c) low marital conflict.
The primary goal of the study is to examine how marital violence, as
opposed to nonviolent but high marital conflict, affects children's
overall adjustment as well as the ways that children think about and react
to family conflict. Exploration into variables that mediate the
association between marital violence and negative child outcomes will help
identify what makes some individuals more vulnerable than others to the
negative impact of exposure to violence. This information has relevance
for intervention and prevention efforts aimed at disrupting the
intergenerational transmission of violence.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01MH036595-09
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