Authors
Eli J Finkel, C Nathan DeWall, Erica B Slotter, Megan Oaten, Vangie A Foshee
Publication date
2009/9
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
97
Issue
3
Pages
483
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Five studies tested the hypothesis that self-regulatory failure is an important predictor of intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration. Study 1 participants were far more likely to experience a violent impulse during conflictual interaction with their romantic partner than they were to enact a violent behavior, suggesting that self-regulatory processes help individuals refrain from perpetrating IPV when they experience a violent impulse. Study 2 participants high in dispositional self-control were less likely to perpetrate IPV, in both cross-sectional and residualized-lagged analyses, than were participants low in dispositional self-control. Study 3 participants verbalized more IPV-related cognitions if they responded immediately to partner provocations than if they responded after a 10-s delay. Study 4 participants whose self-regulatory resources were experimentally depleted were more violent in response to partner …
Total citations
2008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202423143031475053695246573740442710
Scholar articles
EJ Finkel, CN DeWall, EB Slotter, M Oaten, VA Foshee - Journal of personality and social psychology, 2009