276 results on '"Giordano PC"'
Search Results
2. Association of XmnI (-158 γG) Polymorphism and Response to Hydroxyurea in Omani S/S and S/β Patients
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Egbert Bakker, Giordano Pc, Harteveld Cl, and Suha M. Hassan
- Subjects
Prior treatment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Haplotype ,Disease ,Gastroenterology ,Surgery ,Non responders ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,Genotype ,Xmni polymorphism ,Medicine ,business ,Elevated HbF - Abstract
Objective: To describe the effect of Hydroxyurea (HU) treatment in Omani Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) patients with different beta-globin gene cluster haplotypes. Materials and methods: A total of 52 cases treated with HU were enrolled in this study. Response to the drug was compared between patients with and without the XmnI polymorphism in the different betaglobin gene cluster haplotypes. We have classified our cohort into three categories: good responders to HU for those patients who had no crises and no hospitalization after 6 months of treatment; partial responders for those who had a reduction in the number of crises after the same period and non responders for those that remained clinically unchanged even after doubling the HU prescription. Results: Most patients homozygous or heterozygous for the Xmn I polymorphism (T/T or T/C) had higher levels of HbF prior treatment than those having the CC genotype and were classified under good or partial responders. Conclusions: Being the Xmn-I polymorphism associated with the haplotypes frequent in Oman and acting as enhancer of the already elevated HbF expression, HU treatment can be prospectively applied to predict responsiveness and treatment can be given to those with low HbF expression for beneficial lowering of cellular adhesion. HU treatment can ameliorate the clinical phenotype of the large majority of Omani patients with SCD.
- Published
- 2014
3. Detection of a thalassemic alpha-chain variant (Hemoglobin Groene Hart) by reversed-phase liquid chromatography
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Zanella-Cleon, I., Becchi, M., Lacan, P., Giordano, Pc, Wajcman, H., Francina, A., and Deleage, Gilbert
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[SDV.BBM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry, Molecular Biology - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemoglobin (Hb) Groene Hart [alpha119 (H2)Pro-->Ser (alpha1)], also known as Hb Bernalda, is a nondeletional alpha-thalassemic Hb variant that is frequent in southern Italy and North Africa. This variant is not supposed to be produced in the erythrocytes of carriers. The alpha-thalassemic behavior of this variant has been explained as an impaired interaction between the alpha-globin chain and the alpha-Hb-stabilizing protein. METHODS: To separate globin chains, we developed a modified reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) procedure that uses acetonitrile-water solvents containing up to 3 mL/L trifluoroacetic acid. After RPLC, we characterized the isolated globin chains by electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (MS) and analyzed their tryptic peptides with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) MS and nano-LC-ESI-MS/MS. RESULTS: RPLC detected an abnormal peak with a retention time substantially greater than that of the wild-type alpha(A)-globin chain. We identified this variant as Hb Groene Hart and found it in the hemolysates of 11 unrelated patients (1 homozygote, 9 heterozygotes, and 1 heterozygote associated with the -alpha(3.7) deletion). These patients possessed abnormal hematologic features suggesting an alpha-thalassemia phenotype. Molecular modeling suggested that the increase in hydrophobicity was due to opening of the GH interhelical segment following replacement of amino acid residue 119 with a nonhelix breaker residue. CONCLUSIONS: This method allows the detection of Hb variants at low concentrations, and adjusting the composition of the organic solvents enables the method to identify Hb variants with large changes in hydrophobicity.BACKGROUND: Hemoglobin (Hb) Groene Hart [alpha119 (H2)Pro-->Ser (alpha1)], also known as Hb Bernalda, is a nondeletional alpha-thalassemic Hb variant that is frequent in southern Italy and North Africa. This variant is not supposed to be produced in the erythrocytes of carriers. The alpha-thalassemic behavior of this variant has been explained as an impaired interaction between the alpha-globin chain and the alpha-Hb-stabilizing protein. METHODS: To separate globin chains, we developed a modified reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) procedure that uses acetonitrile-water solvents containing up to 3 mL/L trifluoroacetic acid. After RPLC, we characterized the isolated globin chains by electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (MS) and analyzed their tryptic peptides with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) MS and nano-LC-ESI-MS/MS. RESULTS: RPLC detected an abnormal peak with a retention time substantially greater than that of the wild-type alpha(A)-globin chain. We identified this variant as Hb Groene Hart and found it in the hemolysates of 11 unrelated patients (1 homozygote, 9 heterozygotes, and 1 heterozygote associated with the -alpha(3.7) deletion). These patients possessed abnormal hematologic features suggesting an alpha-thalassemia phenotype. Molecular modeling suggested that the increase in hydrophobicity was due to opening of the GH interhelical segment following replacement of amino acid residue 119 with a nonhelix breaker residue. CONCLUSIONS: This method allows the detection of Hb variants at low concentrations, and adjusting the composition of the organic solvents enables the method to identify Hb variants with large changes in hydrophobicity.
- Published
- 2008
4. Hb St. Jozef, A Val-->Leu N-terminal mutation leading to retention of the methionine, and partial acetylation found in the globin gene in Cis with a -alpha3.7 thalassemia deletion
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Harteveld, Cl, Versteegh, Fg, Vanleer, Eh, Starreveld, Js, Kok, Pj, Vanrooijen-Nijdam, I., Vandelft, P., Zanella-Cleon, I., Becchi, M., Wajcman, H., Giordano, Pc, and Deleage, Gilbert
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[SDV.BBM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry, Molecular Biology - Abstract
We report a new hemoglobin (Hb) variant found in a 6-year-old girl of Moroccan origin, living in the Dutch city of Gouda. The child was referred because of microcytic and hypochromic parameters. A normal zinc protoporphyirin (ZPP) value excluded iron deficiency and gap-polymerase chain reaction (gap-PCR) revealed a heterozygosity for the common -alpha(3.7) thalassemia deletion, partially justifying the hematological picture. The Hb pattern on alkaline electrophoresis and capillary electrophoresis was normal, while a fraction of 9% preceding the Hb A peak, remained visible on different high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) devices. This fraction, located in front of the Hb A peak, is usually considered as a Hb A derivate that becomes more expressed in older samples. However, the sample was freshly collected and the peak unusually evident. Therefore, direct sequencing of the alpha-globin genes was performed revealing a GTG-->CTG transversion at codon 1 of the alpha1-globin gene or of the hybrid gene. This point mutation induces a single amino acid substitution from valine to leucine. Electrospray-mass spectrometry (ES-MS) analysis revealed, in addition to this substitution, that the N-terminal methionine was retained and that about 20% of the variant was acetylated. As expected for an association with a -alpha(3.7)-thalassemia (thal) deletion, the non acetylated and acetylated abnormal alpha chain amounted to 32% of the total alpha chains. Family studies revealed that the mutated codon was located in cis of the deletion.We report a new hemoglobin (Hb) variant found in a 6-year-old girl of Moroccan origin, living in the Dutch city of Gouda. The child was referred because of microcytic and hypochromic parameters. A normal zinc protoporphyirin (ZPP) value excluded iron deficiency and gap-polymerase chain reaction (gap-PCR) revealed a heterozygosity for the common -alpha(3.7) thalassemia deletion, partially justifying the hematological picture. The Hb pattern on alkaline electrophoresis and capillary electrophoresis was normal, while a fraction of 9% preceding the Hb A peak, remained visible on different high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) devices. This fraction, located in front of the Hb A peak, is usually considered as a Hb A derivate that becomes more expressed in older samples. However, the sample was freshly collected and the peak unusually evident. Therefore, direct sequencing of the alpha-globin genes was performed revealing a GTG-->CTG transversion at codon 1 of the alpha1-globin gene or of the hybrid gene. This point mutation induces a single amino acid substitution from valine to leucine. Electrospray-mass spectrometry (ES-MS) analysis revealed, in addition to this substitution, that the N-terminal methionine was retained and that about 20% of the variant was acetylated. As expected for an association with a -alpha(3.7)-thalassemia (thal) deletion, the non acetylated and acetylated abnormal alpha chain amounted to 32% of the total alpha chains. Family studies revealed that the mutated codon was located in cis of the deletion.
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- 2007
5. A new polyadenylation site mutation associated with a mild beta-thallassemia phenotype
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Giordano, PC, Bouva, MJ, van Delft, P, Akkerman, N, Klunne, Mies, Harteveld, CL, and Hematology
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- 2005
6. A new polydenylation site mutation associated with a meld ß-thalassemia phenotype
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Giordano, PC, Bouva, MJ, van Delft, P, Akkerman, N, Klunne, Mies, Harteveld, CL, and Hematology
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- 2005
7. A novel 7.9 kb deletion causing alpha+-thallasaemia in two independent families of Indian origin
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Harteveld, CL, van Delft, P, Wijermans, PW, Klunne, Mies, Weegenaar, J, Losekoot, M, Giordano, PC, and Hematology
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- 2003
8. Hb Aghia Sophia [alpha 62(E11)Val -> 0 (alpha 1)], an 'in-frame' deletion causing alpha-thalassemia
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Traeger-Synodinos, J Harteveld, CL Kanavakis, E Giordano, PC and Kattamis, C Bernini, LF
- Abstract
In this report we describe a case of Hb H disease due to the interaction of the - -((MED I)) deletion with a new alpha(+)-thalassemia determinant. The molecular analysis of the proband’s genomic DNA was carried out by polymerase chain reaction amplification and sequencing of both alpha genes of the alpha(+)-thalassemia chromosome and revealed a deletion of codon 62 of the alpha 1 gene. This DNA triplet codes for a valine residue at the E11 alpha helix, which is located in the interior of the heme pocket. Substitutions of valine E11 with other amino acid residues in the alpha as well as beta polypeptide chains lead, in the heterozygous carrier, either to Hb M disease or to congenital non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia. We assume that the deletion of valine at alpha 62(E11) disrupts the conformation of the alpha chain to such an extent that the mutated subunit is rapidly removed by proteolysis. The final result is an alpha-thalassemia phenotype rather than an unstable hemoglobin syndrome. This conclusion is supported by the apparent absence of an abnormal alpha chain in the peripheral blood of the patient.
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- 1999
9. Haplotype analysis of two new, independent cases of Hb Osu-Christiansborg
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Giordano, PC, Harteveld, CL, Bernini, LF, Doorduijn, Jeanette, Geenen, AA, Kok, PJM, Versteegh, FGA, and Hematology
- Published
- 1999
10. Atypical HdH disease in a Surinamese patient resulting from a combination of the-SEA and -alpha 3.7 deletions with HbC heterozygosity
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Giordano, PC, Harteveld, CL, Michiels, Jan, Terpstra, WE, Batelaan, D, van Delft, P, Plug, RJ, van der Wielen, MJR, Losekoot, M, Bernini, LF, and Hematology
- Published
- 1997
11. HB KURDISTAN [ALPHA-47(CE5)ASP-]TYR], A NEW ALPHA-CHAIN VARIANT IN COMBINATION WITH BETA-THALASSEMIA
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GIORDANO, PC, HARTEVELD, CL, STRENG, H, Oosterwijk, Jan, HEISTER, JGAM, AMONS, R, BERNINI, LF, Damage and Repair in Cancer Development and Cancer Treatment (DARE), and Targeted Gynaecologic Oncology (TARGON)
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CELLS ,HEMOGLOBINS ,DNA - Abstract
We have characterized the structural abnormality of a new alpha chain mutant found in a Kurdish; family. The clinical and hematological investigation of eight individuals have shown that the a variant is associated with a beta degrees-thalassemia mutation (nonsense codon 39). The tryptic peptide map and sequencing of the abnormal peptide revealed the substitution of an aspartic acid by a tyrosine residue at position 47 of the alpha chain; furthermore, selective amplification and molecular analysis of both alpha genes have assigned the new mutation to the alpha 2 gene. The variant, named Hb Kurdistan, is clinically silent but the percentage of this hemoglobin found in the only double heterozygote for beta degrees-thalassemia and alpha-Kurdistan, presumably indicates a lower affinity of the abnormal chain for the beta polypeptides.
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- 1994
12. Diagnosis of Hb-pathies
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Giordano, PC, primary
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- 2002
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13. Correspondence
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Giordano Pc
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Alpha-thalassemia ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Hemoglobin A2 ,Iron-deficiency anemia ,Internal medicine ,Clinical diagnosis ,medicine ,Hemoglobin ,ANEMIA IRON DEFICIENCY ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Published
- 2003
14. Occurrence of common and rare δ-globin gene defects in two multiethnic populations: thirteen new mutations and the significance of δ-globin gene defects in β-thalassemia diagnostics.
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PHYLIPSEN M, GALLIVAN MVE, ARKESTEIJN SGJ, HARTEVELD CL, and GIORDANO PC
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- 2011
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15. Interaction of two different disorders in the beta-globin gene cluster associated with an increased hemoglobin F production: a novel deletion type of (G) gamma + ((A) gamma delta beta)(0)-thalassemia and a delta(0)-hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin determinant
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Losekoot, M, primary, Fodde, R, additional, Gerritsen, EJ, additional, van de Kuit, I, additional, Schreuder, A, additional, Giordano, PC, additional, Vossen, JM, additional, and Bernini, LF, additional
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- 1991
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16. Iron depletion: an ameliorating factor for sickle cell disease?
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Giordano PC, Huisman W, and Harteveld CL
- Abstract
We report some observations from our laboratory practice that might be important for the treatment of sickle cell disease (SCD). We describe data from two cases indicating that iron depletion might have a beneficial effect diminishing the formation of HbS in favor of HbF, possibly reducing the severity of the disease. We believe that it would be worthwhile to monitor the course of the disease comparing cases with identical genotypes with and without iron depletion, and we advise to consider chelation therapy to reduce iron overload in patients with SCD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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17. An overview of current microarray-based human globin gene mutation detection methods
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Joanne Traeger-Synodinos, Piero C. Giordano, Thessalia Papasavva, George P. Patrinos, Maurizio Ferrari, Cornelis L. Harteveld, Laura Cremonesi, Marina Kleanthous, Cremonesi, L, Ferrari, M, Giordano, Pc, Harteveld, Cl, Kleanthous, M, Papasavva, T, Patrinos, Gp, TRAEGER-SYNODINOS, J, and Cell biology
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Genetics ,Microarray ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Hematology ,Biology ,Single-base extension ,Primer extension ,Globins ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Mutation ,Humans ,Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification ,Globin ,Genotyping ,Genetics (clinical) ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis - Abstract
The panoply of human globin gene mutation detection methods could become significantly enriched with the advent of microarray-based genotyping platforms. The aim of this article is to provide an overview of the current medium and high-throughput microarray-based globin gene mutation detection platforms, namely the microelectronic array, the "thalassochip" arrayed primer extension (APEX) technology and the single base extension methods. This article also outlines an emerging method based on multiple ligation probe amplification (MLPA) and discusses the implications of customized solutions for resequencing of genomic loci in relation to molecular genetic testing of hemoglobinopathies.
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- 2007
18. Understanding the effect of adverse childhood experiences on the risk of engaging in physical violence toward an intimate partner: The influence of relationship, social psychological, and sociodemographic contextual risk factors.
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Kaufman-Parks AM, Longmore MA, Manning WD, and Giordano PC
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- Adult, Male, Adolescent, Humans, Female, United States, Physical Abuse, Longitudinal Studies, Risk Factors, Interpersonal Relations, Adverse Childhood Experiences, Intimate Partner Violence psychology
- Abstract
Background: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) increase the risk of engaging in intimate partner violence (IPV) in later life., Objective: This study investigates the association between ACEs and engaging in physical violence toward a romantic partner in emerging adulthood while also accounting for proximal life experiences, including social psychological, intimate relationship, and sociodemographic characteristics., Participants and Setting: This study draws on two waves of data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study, a 19-year population-based longitudinal cohort study of adolescents transitioning to adulthood from Lucas County, Ohio (United States). This investigation includes 878 (399 men and 479 women) emerging adults., Methods: To evaluate the association between ACEs and IPV perpetration, two waves of survey data were used, collected in 2001 and 2011-2012., Results: ACEs had a cumulative effect on IPV, where each additional ACE increased the odds of engaging in IPV by 51.0 % (p < 0.001). However, current drug use (OR = 1.131, p < 0.05), arguments between partners (OR = 1.517, p < 0.01), partner mistrust (OR = 1.663, p < 0.001), and jealousy and control (OR = 1.412, p < 0.001) were also significant correlates of IPV reports., Conclusions: ACEs are a significant predictor of IPV perpetration among emerging adults, even when accounting for more proximal risk factors. These findings suggest that individuals working with clients who engage in IPV would do well to address the long-term trauma impacts of early life adversity in addition to more proximal risk factors to reduce the risk of continued violence., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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19. Gender, Relationship Concerns, and Intimate Partner Violence in Young Adulthood.
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Giordano PC, Grace MM, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
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Purpose: Few studies have examined gender-specific concerns within intimate relationships that may be associated with conflict escalation and intimate partner violence (IPV). While prior theorizing has emphasized issues such as men's feelings of jealousy, the role of concerns and conflict related to men's actions has not been as thoroughly investigated. We draw on the life course perspective as background for assessing conflict areas related to men's and women's actions during the young adult period, and subsequently the association between such concerns and the odds of reporting IPV in a current/most recent relationship., Method: Building on a longitudinal data set focused on a large, diverse sample (Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study, n = 904), we administered surveys that assessed whether disagreements about potential conflict areas-including but not limited to infidelity-related to male or female partner's actions., Results: Concerns about women's and men's actions were both related to the odds of reporting IPV experience, but disagreements about male partners' actions during young adulthood were actually more common, and relative to concerns about women's actions, more strongly associated with IPV., Conclusions: Research and programmatic efforts should give additional attention to specific areas around which couples' disagreements develop and conflicts sometimes escalate. A dyadic approach adds to the frequent emphasis on emotion management and control that center primarily on one partner's problematic relationship style-thus addressing the 'form' but not the 'content' of intimate partner conflicts. This approach would highlight a broader range of relationship dynamics than are currently included in theorizing and applied efforts., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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20. The Influence of Peers, Romantic Partners, and Families on Emerging Adults' Sexual Behavior.
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Kaufman-Parks AM, Longmore MA, Manning WD, and Giordano PC
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- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Partners, Peer Group, Adolescent Behavior
- Abstract
Prior research acknowledges that families and peers influence adolescents' sexual behaviors. Far fewer studies have explored whether and how families and peers influence sexual behaviors among emerging adults, especially among those in committed intimate partnerships, while also accounting for dynamics specific to the intimate relationship and respondents' sociodemographic characteristics. Even less is known about whether and how previous romantic relationship experiences might influence emerging adults' future sexual behavior both within and outside the confines of committed intimate partnerships. Drawing on longitudinal data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study, we examined how emerging adults' family backgrounds, peers' sexual attitudes and behaviors, and past and current relationship experiences influenced their engagement in casual sex and sexual non-exclusivity. We found that each of these contexts was significant predictors of emerging adults' casual sex, and that both peers and romantic relationship experiences significantly influenced the likelihood of engaging in sexually non-exclusive behaviors among those in committed dating, cohabiting, and marital partnerships. We discuss potential theoretical mechanisms linking these relationships and provide suggestions for future research., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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21. Relationship Dynamics and Abusive Interactions in a National Sample of Youth and Young Adults.
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Mumford EA, Liu W, Copp JE, Taylor BG, MacLean K, and Giordano PC
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- Humans, Young Adult, Adolescent, Child, Longitudinal Studies, Violence, Parents psychology, Interpersonal Relations, Crime Victims psychology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Adolescent Behavior psychology
- Abstract
Stemming intimate partner violence among adults demands earlier education and skill-building supportive of healthy youth and young adult dating relationships. The current U.S.-based study examines a spectrum of youth and young adult relationship dynamics (RDs), inclusive of abusive interactions. In a nationally representative cohort of youth aged 10-18 at baseline and one parent or caregiver, survey responses regarding RDs from 618 participants ages 15-23 at wave 5 follow-up were analyzed. Latent class analysis of four positive dynamics, six problematic dynamics, and three scales of adolescent relationship abuse (ARA) were estimated, yielding four latent profiles of dating RDs. Relationships characterized by Unhealthy and Intense RDs both exhibited high probability of ARA but differed from each other in terms of other positive and problematic dynamics. Relationships characterized by Disengaged RDs had lower probability of ARA but elevated probability of awkward communications, negative feelings, social liability, and other challenging dynamics. Several baseline covariates were significantly associated with profiles of dating RDs approximately 5 years later. Younger participants were more likely to subsequently fall in an Intense or Disengaged RDs profile, as were participants with baseline emotional health problems. Further, classification in the Unhealthy RDs profile was less likely for participants reporting a better baseline relationship with their parents and more likely for those exposed to violence in childhood. These findings suggest that in addition to developmental maturity, youth and young adults would benefit from closer investigation and processing of past emotional and relational issues and traumas to foster healthier dating relationships.
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- 2023
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22. Some cognitive transformations about the dynamics of desistance.
- Author
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Giordano PC
- Abstract
This article explores the role of cognitive transformations in the process of desistance from crime. Based on our own and others' subsequent research, clearly, some aspects of our initial theorizing warrant revisiting and adjustment. The discussion describes changes to ideas about the sequencing of various types of cognitive shifts, suggests the importance of emotional processes in tandem with changes in perspective, and highlights the need to move out of the comfort zone of crime itself when thinking about redefinitions that support desistance. Yet, a consistent notion remains that social and broader structural factors are deeply implicated-directly and indirectly-in all aspects of the change process. This includes the important area of "derailments" from a pattern of forward progress, where additional processual research is needed. The discussion concludes with the argument that individualistic policies and programs centered on cognitive deficits requiring correction are likely to be limited in their effectiveness., Competing Interests: The author declares no conflict of interest., (© 2022 The Authors. Criminology & Public Policy published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Criminology.)
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- 2022
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23. The Stress of Motherhood and Intimate Partner Violence during Emerging Adulthood.
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Nash SP, Sevareid EE, Longmore MA, Manning WD, and Giordano PC
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Intimate partner violence is a serious social and public health problem for women. Researchers have shown the context in which intimate partner violence occurs matters, yet, prior work has not examined specifically whether motherhood, and the relationship context of motherhood, are associated with physical violence. Drawing on the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) (n = 492), and the stress process framework, we compared emerging adult mothers' (mothers with one child and mothers with multiple children) and non-mothers' reports of physical violence. Using negative binomial regression models, we found that mothers with multiple children compared with non-mothers reported more instances of relationship violence. We also found women in dating relationships with one child compared to non-mothers reported substantially more physical violence. These findings underscore the nature of stress and motherhood during emerging adulthood and the need for intervention strategies that target new mothers., Competing Interests: Authors have no known conflicts of interests to disclose.
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- 2022
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24. "Micro-cultures" of conflict: Couple-level perspectives on reasons for and causes of intimate partner violence in young adulthood.
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Giordano PC, Grace MM, Longmore MA, and Manning WD
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Objective: To highlight the development of young adult couples' shared understandings about reasons for conflict in their relationships, views about why some disagreements included the use of aggression ("causes"), and gendered perspectives on these relationship dynamics., Background: Feminist theories have centered on relationship dynamics associated with intimate partner violence (IPV), but have focused primarily on men's concerns (e.g., jealousy) and use of violence as a means of control over female partners. The current analysis drew on symbolic interaction theory as a framework for exploring couple-level concerns, and ways in which dyadic communication contributes to these understandings, or what can be considered "micro-cultures" of conflict., Method: The study relied on in-depth interviews with a heterogeneous sample of IPV-experienced young adults who had participated in a larger longitudinal study (Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study [TARS]) and separate interviews with their partners ( n = 90)., Results: Analyses revealed that women's concerns about men's actions (e.g., infidelity) were frequently cited as reasons for serious conflicts, and showed significant concordance in partners' reports. Shared understandings sometimes extended to views on the role of more distal causes (e.g., family background) and the meaning(s) of each partner's use of aggression. Gendered dynamics included men's tendency to minimize women's concerns, and both partners' more open discussions of women's perpetration., Conclusions: Theories of IPV and associated programmatic efforts should include attention to the social construction of these "micro-cultures," as these shared meanings affect behavior, are potentially malleable, and add to the more intuitive focus on one-sided forces of control and constraint., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Marriage and Family published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of National Council on Family Relations.)
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- 2022
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25. Adolescents' Frequency of Alcohol Use and Problems from Alcohol Abuse: Integrating Dating Partners with Parent and Peer Influences.
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Longmore MA, Sevareid EE, Manning WD, Giordano PC, Clemens W, and Taylor H
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Parents, Peer Group, Peer Influence, Young Adult, Alcoholism, Underage Drinking
- Abstract
Despite the centrality of dating relationships for teens, it is unclear whether the influence of romantic partners' alcohol use on adolescents' under-age drinking is distinct from the influence of peers and parents. To address this gap, this study used longitudinal data from a population-based sample of 825 adolescents (49% male, 51% female), ages 12 to 19. Adolescents completed a survey using laptops for privacy, and a parent completed a survey separately. Ordinary least squares and logistic regression models assessed alcohol use frequency and alcohol problems and included dating partners' drinking, adolescents' prior drinking, peers' drinking, parents' substance use, parental monitoring, and sociodemographic background characteristics. Alcohol use frequency and alcohol problems were influenced by dating partners' alcohol use and dating partners' influence was stronger on older adolescents and male adolescents. The study results are useful for public health messaging and prevention efforts by demonstrating the influence of parents, peers, and dating partners on teens' alcohol use., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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26. The Relationship Between Medical Diagnoses, Risk Perceptions, and Social Distancing Compliance: An Analysis of Data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study.
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King IY, Manning WD, Longmore MA, and Giordano PC
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Background: The health belief model suggests that individuals' beliefs affect behaviors associated with health. This study examined whether Ohioans' pre-existing medical health diagnoses affected their belief about personal health risk and their compliance with social distancing during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Prior research examining physical and mental diagnoses and social distancing compliance is nearly nonexistent. We examined whether physical and mental health diagnoses influenced individuals' beliefs that their health is at risk and their adherence with social distancing guidelines., Methods: The study used longitudinal cohort data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) (n = 790), which surveyed Ohioans prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Dependent variables included belief that an individual's own health was at risk and social distancing compliance. Independent variables included physical and mental health diagnoses, pandemic-related factors (fear of COVID-19, political beliefs about the pandemic, friends social distance, family social distance, COVID-19 exposure), and sociodemographic variables (age, gender, race/ethnicity, educational level)., Results: Individuals who had a pre-existing physical health diagnosis were more likely to believe that their personal health was at risk during the pandemic but were not more likely to comply with social distancing guidelines. In contrast, individuals who had a pre-existing mental health diagnosis were more compliant with social distancing guidelines but were not more likely to believe their personal health was at risk. Individuals who expressed greater fear of COVID-19 believed their health is more at risk than those who expressed lower levels of fear., Conclusion: Health considerations are important to account for in assessments of responses to the pandemic, beliefs about personal health risk, and social distancing behavior. Additional research is needed to understand the divergence in the findings regarding physical health, beliefs about personal health risk, and social distancing compliance. Further, research is needed to understand how mental health issues impact decision-making related to social distancing compliance.
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- 2022
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27. Cognitive schemas and fertility motivations in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Manning WD, Guzzo KB, Longmore MA, and Giordano PC
- Abstract
While current evidence indicates that the United States did not experience a baby boom during the pandemic, few empirical studies have considered the underlying rationale for the American baby bust. Relying on data collected during the pandemic ( n = 574), we find that pandemic-related subjective assessments (e.g., self-reported stress, fear of COVID-19 and relationship struggles) and not economic indicators (e.g., employment status, income level) were related to levels of fertility motivations among individuals in relationships. Analysis of within-person changes in fertility motivations shows that shifts in the number of children, increases in mental health issues and increases in relationship uncertainty, rather than changes in economic circumstances, were associated with short-term assessments of the importance of avoiding a pregnancy. We argue for broadening conceptual frameworks of fertility motivations by moving beyond a focus on economic factors to include a cognitive schema that takes subjective concerns into account.
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- 2022
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28. The Relationship Context of Early Transitions to Parenthood: The Influence of Arrest.
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Landeis M, Manning WD, Longmore MA, Giordano PC, and Joyner K
- Abstract
In the U.S., many young adults who have had contact with the criminal justice system are parents. Using the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study ( n = 1321), we drew on family demography and criminology literatures to examine the association between arrest, an understudied indicator of contact with the criminal justice system, and transitions to early parenthood. We also distinguished transitions to parenthood that occurred within four different relationship contexts: (1) single; (2) dating; (3) cohabiting; and (4) married. Using event history analyses, we found that young men and women who experienced an arrest transitioned to parenthood earlier than their counterparts who were not arrested. Further, men with an arrest, compared to men who had not been arrested, were more likely to report that they were dating the biological mother of their first child around the time of birth. In contrast, women with an arrest had an increased likelihood of having their first birth while cohabiting with the biological father. Our results highlighted the importance of a prior arrest for early transitions to parenthood and are relevant for understanding the intergenerational transmission of disadvantage and the diverging destinies of children and parents. Furthermore, the gender differences in the results illustrated the importance of including women in criminal justice analyses and men in fertility analyses.
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- 2021
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29. Relationship Dynamics Associated with Dating Violence among Adolescents and Young Adults: A Feminist Post-Structural Analysis.
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Giordano PC, Copp JE, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
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We focus on the character of adolescent and young adult relationships, and argue that attention to interpersonal features of intimate partner violence (IPV) is necessary for a comprehensive view of this form of violence. Drawing on ideas from feminist post-structural perspectives, we highlight studies that develop a somewhat non-traditional but nevertheless gendered portrait of relationships as a backdrop for exploring dyadic processes associated with IPV. Findings are based on quantitative and qualitative analyses from a longitudinal study of a large, diverse sample of young women and men interviewed first during adolescence, and five additional times across the transition to adulthood.
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- 2021
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30. An Exploratory Investigation of Parental Incarceration, Emotional Independence, and Adult Children's Criminal Activity.
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Finkeldey JG, Longmore MA, Giordano PC, and Manning WD
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Although research suggests that parental incarceration is associated with intergenerational continuity in crime, the mechanisms underlying this association remain unclear. Using multi-population structural equation modeling and data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study ( n = 1207), the current study explored specific experiences associated with labeling as well as internalizing labels, including experiencing corporal punishment during childhood, criminal arrests during adolescence, and identifying as a troublemaker/partier in young adulthood (measured with reflected appraisals), as potential mechanisms linking parental incarceration and young adults' offending. We assessed whether this association differed by young adults' level of emotional independence, that is, freedom from the need for parental approval. We found that parental incarceration indirectly influenced criminal activity particularly through identifying as a troublemaker/partier during young adulthood but only for those who sought parental approval. Overall, we concluded that high emotional independence, or not seeking parental approval, may be a protective factor that facilitates intergenerational dis continuities in crime.
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- 2021
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31. The Influence of Demographic, Relational, and Risk Asymmetries on the Frequency of Intimate Partner Violence in Young Adulthood.
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Cooper LM, Longmore MA, Manning WD, and Giordano PC
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Social characteristics are prominent factors in mate selection, but they can be risk factors for intimate partner violence. Yet this prior work is limited, as it largely focuses on demographic differences (or asymmetries) between intimate partners. In addition to demographic asymmetries, we explored how differences in relational and risk behaviors were associated with intimate partner violence. Examining data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) (n=828), we found that either partner's unemployment is associated with greater frequency of relationship violence; and, compared to same-race relationships, interracial relationships reported higher frequency of partner violence. Additionally, relationships in which men compared to their partners were more invested, were characterized by lower frequency of violence. Relationships characterized by any asymmetry in power, compared to those in which both partners held equal power, were also characterized by higher frequency of partner violence. Relationships in which the female partner was more successful at school or work compared to the male partner were associated with more frequent partner violence. Lastly, compared to relationships in which neither partner engaged in antisocial/criminal activity, those in which the male, but not female partner was antisocial/criminal and those in which both partners engaged in antisocial/criminal activity reported greater frequency of partner violence. These findings highlighted the importance of considering different types of asymmetries for understanding intimate partner violence in young adult relationships.
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- 2021
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32. The Role of Marriage and Military Service on Reoffending: Race, "The Respectability Package," and the Desistance Process.
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Johnson WL and Giordano PC
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We build on prior research examining military involvement and criminal involvement by investigating the importance of acquiring the more complete "respectability package" that includes marriage as well as military experience and variations among White and Black respondents. Using data from Waves I and IV of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health; n = 5,801), analyses use logistic regression models to assess associations of military service, marriage, and race with odds of reoffending among White and Black young adults who reported offending at Wave I. Military involvement was associated with lower odds of offending for Black respondents only, while marriage was associated with decreased odds of reoffending across both groups. Among Black respondents, analyses also highlighted the importance of acquiring both components of the respectability package (military service and marriage) in the context of today's all-volunteer force in reducing criminal involvement., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2021
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33. CONTINUING EDUCATION: TOWARD A LIFE-COURSE PERSPECTIVE ON SOCIAL LEARNING.
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Giordano PC
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Sutherland's differential association theory and the life course perspective have at times been conceptualized as contrasting theories of criminal behavior. I argue instead that our understanding of delinquency, the dynamics underlying criminal persistence and desistance, and intergenerational patterns, will be enhanced by a more explicit integration of these two traditions. I focus on family processes, as these are foundational intimate relationships that remain underappreciated as a source of lifelong learning and influence. While family support and variations in parental supervision have been amply investigated, 'direct transmission' takes place within the family as well as within the confines of the more heavily studied world of adolescent peer groups. I identify five dimensions of direct transmission, and illustrate these dynamic processes with qualitative data from two longitudinal studies and results of recent quantitative analyses. The analysis is generally in line with Sutherland's original formulation, but includes several extensions and modifications. It is important to include a role for human agency, and for 'non-criminal' definitions and lifestyle factors, in addition to the directly criminogenic definitions Sutherland and subsequent researchers have emphasized. The focus on social processes is, however, consistent with Sutherland's goal of highlighting limitations of psychological and biological differences explanations.
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- 2020
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34. Desistance from Crime during the Transition to Adulthood: The Influence of Parents, Peers, and Shifts in Identity.
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Copp JE, Giordano PC, Longmore MA, and Manning WD
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Objectives: Research on criminal continuity and change has traditionally focused on elements of the adult life course (e.g., marriage and employment); however, recent social and economic changes suggest the need to consider a broader range of factors. In addition, researchers have increasingly recognized the importance of identity changes in the desistance process., Methods: Using five waves of structured data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS), we examined identity changes, shifts in involvement with delinquent peers, and variability in closeness with parents as influences on desistance. In-depth interviews with a subset of TARS respondents offered a person-centered lens on individual and social processes associated with variability in criminal behavior., Results: Findings indicated that identity changes were associated with declines in offending. In addition, changes in parental closeness and the extent of affiliation with antisocial peers contributed to patterns of offending, net of these subjectively experienced cognitive changes., Conclusions: Cognitive processes are important to desistance. However, they do not independently provide a path to sustained behavioral change. Social experiences, including changes in relationships/supports from parents and affiliation with delinquent peers, also figure into change processes. We discuss the implications of our findings for future research and programmatic efforts., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2020
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35. Perpetration of Adolescent Dating Relationship Abuse: The Role of Conditional Tolerance for Violence and Friendship Factors.
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Mumford EA, Taylor BG, and Giordano PC
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Probability, Adolescent Behavior, Attitude, Friends, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Intimate Partner Violence statistics & numerical data, Peer Group
- Abstract
Research has pointed to the salience of friendships in predicting abuse in adolescent dating relationships. The current study investigates the perpetration of physical and sexual dating abuse as predicted by individual conditional tolerance for dating abuse within the context of friendship behaviors and group characteristics. Using two waves of the National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV; N = 511 daters aged 12-18 years), we investigated the effects of baseline individual tolerance for hitting dating partners and friendship factors on perpetration of physical and sexual adolescent dating abuse (ADA) approximately 1 year later. Conditional tolerance for hitting boyfriends was associated with ADA perpetration in the absence of friendship characteristics. Daters who reported recent discussion of a problem with friends and female daters who named all-girl friendship groups were more likely to report ADA perpetration. Close friendships are an avenue for preventing ADA perpetration. Furthermore, ADA perpetration may be reduced by targeting conditional tolerance for violence particularly against male partners within female friendship groups.
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- 2020
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36. When Worlds Collide: Linking Involvement with Friends and Intimate Partner Violence in Young Adulthood.
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Giordano PC, Copp JE, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
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Recent increases in the average age at first marriage have created an extended period during which young adults frequently continue to socialize with friends, even as romantic ties typically become increasingly serious. Nevertheless, little research has focused on some of the challenges associated with navigating these two social worlds simultaneously. The current study expanded the traditional lens of social learning theory to investigate associations between a range of attitudes and behaviors of friends and a serious form of conflict-intimate partner violence (IPV). Analyses relied on structured survey and in-depth interview data from a longitudinal study of a large, diverse sample of male and female respondents followed across the adolescent to adult transition ( n = 928). Consistent with prior work, friends' IPV experience was significantly associated with respondents' own IPV perpetration. Yet the social learning perspective we developed highlighted the importance of considering a broader portfolio of friends' characteristics. Controlling for friends' IPV experience and family background: (a) involvement with friends perceived as more liberal in their attitudes toward dating and sexuality and (b) friends' delinquent behavior were both associated with the odds of reporting IPV. Further, longitudinal analyses showed an effect of variability in friends' delinquency on within-individual changes in IPV across the full study period, suggesting that the association is not due solely to an underlying antisocial propensity. In-depth interviews with a subset of respondents ( n = 102) corroborate these results, further illuminate underlying mechanisms, and highlight the dynamic aspects of these forms of social involvement during young adulthood.
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- 2020
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37. Identifying as a Troublemaker/Partier: The Influence of Parental Incarceration and Emotional Independence.
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Finkeldey JG, Longmore MA, Giordano PC, and Manning WD
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Objectives: Researchers have found that experiencing parental incarceration has long-term consequences for children, such as involvement in crime. However, few studies have examined how parental incarceration influences identity endorsement. Given that self-identities influence behavior, including criminal activity, understanding precursors of self-identities is important. In the current paper, we examined the association between parental incarceration and young adult children's deviant self-identities. Furthermore, we explored how this association varied by emotional independence, or freedom from the excessive need for parental approval., Methods: We analyzed data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) ( n = 965), a sample of men and women interviewed five times over a period of ten years (2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, and 2011), and publically available official incarceration records., Results: Parental incarceration was only positively associated with identifying as a troublemaker/partier during young adulthood among those with low emotional independence (i.e., for those with the need for parental approval) ( p < 0.05). That is, parental incarceration was inconsequential for young adults' identifying as troublemakers/partiers among those with high levels of emotional independence (i.e., for those with freedom from the need for parental approval)., Conclusions: These findings suggest that the development of high emotional independence, or values, beliefs, and identities in contrast to and separate from an incarcerated parent, may attenuate the intergenerational transmission of antisocial identities and behavior., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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- 2020
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38. Inducing jealousy and intimate partner violence among young adults.
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Kaufman-Parks AM, Longmore MA, Giordano PC, and Manning WD
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Jealousy has been linked to a number of deleterious relationship outcomes; yet few studies have explored the broader ways in which inducing jealousy affects intimate relationships. Using data on 892 young adults from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS), we examined correlates and consequences of intentionally inducing jealousy in intimate relationships. Results indicated that factors both unique and internal to the intimate dyad and those external to the intimate relationship were associated with jealousy-inducing behaviors. Dyadic factors included verbal conflict and partners' infidelity and controlling behaviors, and external factors included childhood experiences of parent-child physical aggression. Jealousy induction was associated with experiences of partner violence after accounting for familial background, relationship and sociodemographic factors. We discuss potential mechanisms linking these relationship dynamics and provide suggestions for future research.
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- 2019
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39. Dating Relationship Dynamics, Mental Health, and Dating Victimization: A Longitudinal Path Analysis.
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Mumford EA, Taylor BG, Liu W, and Giordano PC
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- Adolescent, Bullying psychology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, Intimate Partner Violence trends, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Risk Factors, Sexual Partners psychology, Crime Victims psychology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Mental Health trends, Sexual Behavior psychology
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the longitudinal association between adolescent dating relationship dynamics (measures of intimacy and problem dynamics), mental health, and physical and/or sexual victimization by a dating partner. Gender-stratified analyses were conducted in a sample of 261 adolescents, ages 10-18 at baseline, interviewed in three annual waves (2013-2015) of the nationally representative Survey on Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV). Among male daters, better mental health at baseline was negatively associated with problem dynamics at follow-up, and aspects of problem dynamics at baseline predicted worse mental health at follow-up. However, unexpectedly, aspects of relationship intimacy at baseline were also negatively associated with mental health at follow-up. Male daters' victimization did not mediate longitudinal measures of mental health or of relationship dynamics, but did predict worse mental health at follow-up. Among female daters, we found no longitudinal associations between mental health and intimacy or problem relationship dynamics, in either direction. However, victimization mediated aspects of female daters' reported relationship dynamics. Dating violence prevention efforts should reflect that adolescent females reporting controlling behaviors and feelings of passionate love may be at increased risk for victimization. Positive youth development efforts should attend to the bidirectional associations of mental health and dating relationship dynamics over time, particularly for male adolescents., (© 2018 Society for Research on Adolescence.)
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- 2019
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40. Neighborhood Norms, Disadvantage, and Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration.
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Copp JE, Giordano PC, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
- Abstract
Most theoretical treatments of intimate partner violence (IPV) focus on individual-level processes. More recently, scholars have begun to examine the role of macrolevel factors. Results of that research indicate that social ties facilitate the diffusion of cultural norms-including tolerance of deviance/violence-across neighborhoods. Yet the influence of the neighborhood normative climate extends beyond norms regarding the use of violence, shaping cultural understanding about dating and the opposite sex. Using data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS), the current investigation examines the multilevel association between dating norms and IPV perpetration among a large, diverse sample of adolescents and young adults. Results indicate that individuals' liberal dating attitudes are associated with IPV perpetration. Furthermore, this effect varies across levels of neighborhood disadvantage.
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- 2019
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41. Linking parental incarceration and family dynamics associated with intergenerational transmission: A life-course perspective.
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Giordano PC, Copp JE, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
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Children experiencing parental incarceration face numerous additional disadvantages, but researchers have often relied on these other co-occurring factors primarily as controls. In this article, we focus on the intimate links between crime and incarceration, as well as on the broader family context within which parental incarceration often unfolds. Thus, parents' drug use and criminal behavior that precedes and may follow incarceration periods may be ongoing stressors that directly affect child well-being. We also use our analyses to foreground mechanisms associated with social learning theories, including observations and communications that increase the child's risk for criminal involvement and other problem outcomes. These related family experiences often channel the child's own developing network ties (peers, romantic partners) that then serve as proximal influences. We explore these processes by drawing on qualitative and quantitative data from a study of the lives of a sample of respondents followed from adolescence to young adulthood, as well as on records searches of parents' incarceration histories. Through our analyses, we find evidence that 1) some effects attributed to parental incarceration likely connect to unmeasured features of the broader family context, and b) together parental incarceration and the broader climate often constitute a tightly coupled package of family-related risks linked to intergenerational continuities in criminal behavior and other forms of social disadvantage.
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- 2019
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42. Criminal Justice Involvement and Young Adult Health: The Role of Adolescent Health Risks and Stress.
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Clemens WM, Longmore MA, Giordano PC, and Manning WD
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Background: Although some studies have found that incarceration is associated with young adults' poor health, confounding factors including adolescent health risks, and mediating influences such as stress have not been examined in the same study. We assessed whether variation in criminal justice system experience (none, arrest only, incarceration) influenced young adults' self-reported depressive symptoms and poor physical health after accounting for prospective risks to health including adolescent health risks. We then assessed whether stress mediated associations between criminal justice involvement and the two health indicators., Methods: Data are from Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) (n =990), which included young adults, age 22-29, who have matured during the era characterized by mass incarceration. The dependent variables included a depressive symptoms scale and self-reported poor health. The adolescent health risks included economic disadvantage, body mass index, delinquency, problems with drugs, and prior depressive symptoms. We considered stress as a mediating variable. Sociodemographic characteristics included race/ethnicity, age, and gender. We used ordinary least squares regression and logistic regression analyses. We tested gender, race/ethnicity, and age interactions., Results: In multivariable models, incarceration, and adolescent health risks (economic disadvantage, prior depression, problems with drugs) were associated with young adults' depressive symptoms, and stress was a mediating influence. Adolescent delinquency and stress, but not incarceration, were significantly associated with young adults' self-reported poor health., Conclusion: This study provided a more nuanced understanding of incarceration and health by accounting for several key confounding factors and testing stress as a mechanism underlying the association. Care for prisoner health during and after incarceration is important for successful reintegration.
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- 2019
43. The Development of Attitudes Toward Intimate Partner Violence: An Examination of Key Correlates Among a Sample of Young Adults.
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Copp JE, Giordano PC, Longmore MA, and Manning WD
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- Domestic Violence prevention & control, Domestic Violence psychology, Female, Heterosexuality psychology, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Spouse Abuse prevention & control, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Sexual Partners psychology, Social Norms
- Abstract
Social learning theory remains one of the leading explanations of intimate partner violence (IPV). Research on attitudes toward IPV represents a logical extension of the social learning tradition, as it is intuitive to expect that individuals exposed to violence in the family of origin may internalize behavioral scripts for violence and adopt attitudes accepting of IPV. Yet despite this assumed link between family violence and attitudes toward IPV, few studies have empirically examined factors associated with the development of such attitudes. Using data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationship Study (TARS), we examine the role of family violence on the adoption of attitudes accepting of IPV among a sample of young adults ( n = 928). The current investigation contributes to existing literature on attitudes toward IPV by (a) providing an empirical examination of factors associated with attitudes toward IPV in predictive models; (b) relying on a multifaceted index, describing specific conditions under which IPV may be deemed justifiable; (c) examining extra-familial factors, in addition to family violence exposure, to provide a more comprehensive account of factors associated with attitudes toward IPV; and (d) focusing particular attention on the role of gender, including whether the factors associated with attitudinal acceptance of IPV are similar for men and women. Findings indicated considerable variation in overall endorsement of attitudes regarding the use of violence across conditions, with greater endorsement among women. Consistent with social learning approaches to IPV, exposure to violence in the family of origin was associated with attitudes toward IPV. Yet findings also signaled the salience of factors beyond the family, including a range of sociodemographic, relationship, and adult status characteristics. We discuss the relevance of our findings for future theorizing and research in the area of attitudes toward IPV.
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- 2019
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44. Girls' and Women's Violence: The Question of General Versus Uniquely Gendered Causes.
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Giordano PC and Copp JE
- Abstract
In this review, we consider theory and research focused on girls' and women's violence, with an emphasis on studies that inform long-running debates about whether uniquely gendered explanations are required to understand such behaviors. The review emphasizes potentially malleable social processes and influences, and studies that have explored neighborhood, family, and peer-based sources of risk. We also examine contemporary research on precursors of a specific type of aggression-intimate partner violence -where self-reports of perpetration have been found to be similar across gender, but research has consistently shown that the consequences are generally more serious for female victims. Our review draws on findings from analyses of large scale survey data as well as qualitative approaches that explore meanings and motivations. The results point to significant areas of overlap as well as some distinctive patterns by gender, support learning and intersectionality theories, and identify potentially fruitful areas for additional research.
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- 2019
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45. Familial Effects on Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration Across Adolescence and Young Adulthood.
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Kaufman-Parks AM, DeMaris A, Giordano PC, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
- Abstract
Research suggests violence in the family-of-origin is a consistent predictor of later intimate partner violence (IPV). However, prior empirical studies have also demonstrated that exposure to violence does not lead deterministically to violent behaviors in young adulthood. Given that family context entails more than simply the presence or absence of abuse, additional aspects of family life warrant examination. One such aspect is the quality of the parent-child relationship. Using five waves of data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study ( N = 950 respondents, 443 males and 507 females), the present study examined both main and interactive effects of parent-child physical aggression (PCPA) and parent-child relationship quality (PCRQ) in predicting adolescents' and young adults' IPV perpetration. Results indicated that both PCPA and PCRQ were key independent predictors of individuals' IPV perpetration, but did not interact to produce cumulatively different risk. Important interactions between PCPA and gender, and PCRQ and age were also found., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2018
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46. Cohabitation and Intimate Partner Violence during Emerging Adulthood: High Constraints and Low Commitment.
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Manning WD, Longmore MA, and Giordano PC
- Abstract
In recent years, a majority of young adults experience cohabitation. Nevertheless, cohabitation is a risk factor for intimate partner violence (IPV). Drawing on social exchange and commitment theory we analyzed young adults' IPV experiences using the recently collected (2011-2012) Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study data (n = 926). We found that sociodemographic characteristics, relationship commitment, quality, and constraints as well as prior experience with violence (in prior relationships and family of origin) were associated with IPV, but did not explain the association between cohabitation and IPV. We examined variation among individuals in cohabiting relationships to determine which cohabitors face the greatest risk of intimate partner violence. Serial cohabitors along with cohabitors who experienced both low commitment and high relational constraints experienced the greatest risk of IPV. These findings provided insights into the implications of cohabitation for the well-being of young adults.
- Published
- 2018
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47. Parental Incarceration and Child Well-being: Conceptual and Practical Concerns Regarding the Use of Propensity Scores.
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Copp JE, Giordano PC, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
- Abstract
The aim of the current investigation was to examine the appropriateness of propensity score methods for the study of incarceration effects on children by directing attention to a range of conceptual and practical concerns, including the exclusion of theoretically meaningful covariates, the comparability of treatment and control groups, and potential ambiguities resulting from researcher-driven analytic decisions. Using data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, we examined the effects of maternal and paternal incarceration on a range of child well-being outcomes, including internalizing and externalizing problem behaviors, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test scores, and early juvenile delinquency. Our findings suggested that propensity scores and treatment effect estimates are highly sensitive to a number of decisions made by the researcher, including aspects where little consensus exists. In light of the conceptual underpinnings of propensity score analysis and existing data limitations, we suggest the potential utility of different identification methods and specialized data collection efforts.
- Published
- 2018
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48. Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration from Adolescence to Young Adulthood: Trajectories and the Role of Familial Factors.
- Author
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Kaufman-Parks AM, DeMaris A, Giordano PC, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
- Abstract
Prior empirical research on intimate partner violence (IPV) in adolescence and young adulthood often focuses on exposure to violence in the family-of-origin using retrospective and cross-sectional data. Yet individuals' families matter beyond simply the presence or absence of abuse, and these effects may vary across time. To address these issues, the present study employed five waves of longitudinal data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS) to investigate the trajectory of IPV from adolescence to young adulthood ( N = 950 respondents, 4,750 person-periods) with a specific focus on how familial factors continue to matter across the life course. Results indicated that family-of-origin violence and parent-child relationship quality were independent predictors of IPV. The effect of parent-child relationship quality on IPV also became greater as individuals aged. These results have implications for policies targeted at reducing IPV.
- Published
- 2018
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49. Parents and partners: Moderating and mediating influences on intimate partner violence across adolescence and young adulthood.
- Author
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Kaufman-Parks AM, DeMaris A, Giordano PC, Manning WD, and Longmore MA
- Abstract
Prior work examining intimate partner violence (IPV) among young adults often has emphasized familial characteristics, such as parent-child physical aggression (PCPA), and romantic relationship dynamics, such as jealousy and controlling behaviors, but has not considered these two domains simultaneously. Likewise, research examining how these two domains affect IPV perpetration over time for young adults is still limited. Using five waves of data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study ( N = 950), the present study examined the influence of parent-child relationship factors and romantic relationship dynamics in both their main and interactive effects on IPV perpetration spanning adolescence through young adulthood. Results from random-effects analyses indicated that both familial and romantic relationship dynamics should be taken into account when predicting IPV perpetration. Importantly, these two domains interacted to produce cumulatively different risk for engaging in violence against a romantic partner. Individuals were more likely to perpetrate IPV when their romantic relationship was characterized by verbal aggression if they reported PCPA experiences.
- Published
- 2017
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50. LIVING WITH PARENTS AND EMERGING ADULTS' DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS.
- Author
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Copp JE, Giordano PC, Longmore MA, and Manning WD
- Abstract
Whether moving back home after a period of economic independence, or having never moved out, the share of emerging adults living with parents is increasing. Yet little is known about the associations of coresidence patterns and rationales for coresidence for emerging adult well-being. Using the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (n = 891), we analyzed depressive symptoms among emerging adults who (1) never left the parental home; (2) returned to the parental home; and (3) were not currently living with a parent. About one-fifth of emerging adults had boomeranged or moved back in with their parents. Among those living with parents, nearly two-fifths had boomeranged or returned to their parental home and they reported significantly higher levels of depressive symptoms. Among coresident emerging adults, both intrinsic and utilitarian motivations (i.e., enjoy living with parents and employment problems) partially mediated the association between coresidence and depressive symptoms. Returning to the parental home was associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms only among emerging adults experiencing employment problems. These findings are especially relevant because the recession hit emerging adults particularly hard. The ability to distinguish boomerang emerging adults and emerging adults who have never left home provides a more nuanced understanding of parental coresidence during this phase of the life course.
- Published
- 2017
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