
@article{ref1,
title="Validation of the Propensity for Abusiveness Scale in Diverse Male Populations",
journal="Journal of family violence",
year="2001",
author="Dutton, Donald G. and Landolt, Markus A. and Starzomski, A. and Bodnarchuk, M.",
volume="16",
number="1",
pages="59-73",
abstract="The Propensity for Abusiveness Scale (PAS; Dutton, 1995) was designed as a self-report perpetrator profile for intimate abusiveness. It was empirically validated through reports of abuse by intimate partners. The original PAS (Dutton, 1995) was given to 144 men in treatment for partner abuse and 44 demographically matched controls. It correlated significantly with partner reports of abusiveness and correctly classified men 82.2% of the time, as one standard deviation above or below the mean partners' report score for abusiveness. In the present study, the PAS was given to clinical outpatients, gay males, male college students, and a group of spousal assaulters. A criterion measure for abusiveness (the Psychological Maltreatment of Women Inventory; Tolman 1989, or the Psychological Maltreatment Inventory; Kasian and Painter, 1992) was collected from intimate partners. In all groups, the PAS correlated significantly with partners' reports of both physical and psychological abusiveness on subscales of the criterion measures: Dominance/Isolation and Emotional Abuse. For the college students and wife-assault groups, a new criterion measure was used: the Severity of Violence Against Women Scale. The PAS correlated significantly with partners' reports of threats and violence measured by this scale. The PAS appears to provide a nonreactive assessment instrument that is a strong predictor of intimate abusiveness across a variety of populations.  Abusiveness Scale - self-report - spousal violence.<p />",
language="en",
issn="0885-7482",
doi="10.1023/A:1026528510057",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026528510057"
}