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Longitudinal trajectories of perpetration of adolescent dating abuse in a national sample Elizabeth A. Mumford,or, Weiwei Liu and Bruce G. Taylor

By: Mumford, Elizabeth A.
Contributor(s): Liu, Weiwei | Taylor, Bruce G.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Aggressive Behavior.Publisher: Wiley, 2019Subject(s): ADOLESCENT RELATIONSHIP ABUSE | DATING VIOLENCE | LONGITUDINAL STUDIES | National Survey on Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV) | PERPETRATORS | YOUNG PEOPLE | INTERNATIONAL | UNITED STATESOnline resources: DOI: 10.1002/ab.21822 | Read NIJ summary of findings from the STRiV study In: Aggressive Bahavior, 2019, 45(3): 327-336Summary: Despite extensive research regarding patterns and outcomes of victimization in dating relationships, there has been limited investigation of the developmental profiles of the perpetration of adolescent dating abuse (ADA). We estimated longitudinal latent growth models of ADA perpetration in a sample of 2,269 U.S. adolescents/young adults ages 12–18 at baseline, drawing on four waves (2013–2017) of data from the nationally representative Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence. Model results revealed three classes representing “nondaters,” respondents showing “increasing dating/ADA,” and respondents with “high/stable dating/ADA.” Results support prior research finding heightened patterns of ADA perpetration by older youth, and distinguish individual and family characteristics associated with adolescent/young adults’ ADA perpetration for the purpose of informing individual and programmatic prevention efforts. (Authors' abstract). Follow the link for an online summary of the findings from this US longitudinal study relating to victims and perpetrators of teen dating violence, and links to related articles. Record #8335
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Aggressive Bahavior, 2019, 45(3): 327-336

Despite extensive research regarding patterns and outcomes of victimization in dating relationships, there has been limited investigation of the developmental profiles of the perpetration of adolescent dating abuse (ADA). We estimated longitudinal latent growth models of ADA perpetration in a sample of 2,269 U.S. adolescents/young adults ages 12–18 at baseline, drawing on four waves (2013–2017) of data from the nationally representative Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence. Model results revealed three classes representing “nondaters,” respondents showing “increasing dating/ADA,” and respondents with “high/stable dating/ADA.” Results support prior research finding heightened patterns of ADA perpetration by older youth, and distinguish individual and family characteristics associated with adolescent/young adults’ ADA perpetration for the purpose of informing individual and programmatic prevention efforts. (Authors' abstract).

Follow the link for an online summary of the findings from this US longitudinal study relating to victims and perpetrators of teen dating violence, and links to related articles. Record #8335