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Journal Article

Citation

Margolin G, Ramos MC, Timmons AC, Miller KF, Han SC. Child Dev. Perspect. 2016; 10(1): 15-21.

Affiliation

University of Southern California.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/cdep.12156

PMID

26929773

Abstract

Children who grow up in aggressive households are at risk of having problems with physiological regulation, but researchers have not investigated physiology as a mechanism in the intergenerational transmission of aggression. In this article, we posit that physiological regulation, particularly during stressful interpersonal interactions, may shed light on sensitivity to conflict, It can also inform our understanding of associations between childhood exposure to aggression in families of origin and aggression against partners in adolescence or adulthood. In support of this model, we highlight findings showing that childhood exposure to family aggression relates to physiological regulation across the life span, and that reactions to physiological stress concurrently relate to aggression against intimate partners. Emerging evidence from research on biological processes during stressful interpersonal interactions raises questions about what is adaptive for individuals from aggressive families, particularly as past family experiences intersect with the challenges of new relationships.


Language: en

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