A Comparison of Impulsive and Instrumental Subgroups of Batterers

1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 217-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger G. Tweed ◽  
Donald G. Dutton

Previous research on subtypes of batterers has revealed at least two distinct types of batterers. One group (Type 1) demonstrates suppressed physiological responding during conflicts with their wives, tends to use violence in nonintimate relationships and manifests Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI-II) scale elevations on the Antisocial and Aggressive-Sadistic scales. The second group (Type 2) manifests violence in the intimate relationship only and reports dysphoria. The current study extends our knowledge of these two groups by using a cluster analysis to assess personality disorder and relating the results to each group’s attachment style, anger, trauma scores, and scores on a self-report of Borderline Personality Organization (BPO). An instrumental group (Type 1) showed an Antisocial-Narcissistic-Aggressive profile on the MCMI-II and reported more severe physical violence. An impulsive group (Type 2) showed a mixed profile on the MCMI-II with Passive-Aggressive, Borderline, and Avoidant elevations, high scores on a self-report of BPO, higher chronic anger, and Fearful attachment. Both types of abusive men reported a Preoccupied attachment style, but only the Impulsive men reported an accompanying Fearful attachment style.

Author(s):  
Thanos Karatzias ◽  
Mark Shevlin ◽  
Julian D. Ford ◽  
Claire Fyvie ◽  
Graeme Grandison ◽  
...  

Abstract Although there has been significant work on the association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and attachment orientation, this is less the case for complex PTSD (CPTSD). The primary aim of this paper was to assess the strength of the association between the four adult attachment styles (i.e., secure, dismissing, preoccupied, and fearful) and severity of CPTSD symptoms (i.e., symptoms of PTSD and disturbances in self-organization [DSO]). We hypothesized that attachment orientation would be more strongly associated with DSO symptoms compared to PTSD symptoms. A trauma exposed clinical sample (N = 331) completed self-report measures of traumatic life events, CPTSD symptoms, and attachment orientation. It was found that secure attachment and fearful attachment were significantly associated with DSO symptoms but not with PTSD symptoms. Dismissing attachment style was significantly associated with PTSD and DSO symptoms. Preoccupied attachment was not significantly associated with CPTSD symptoms. Treatment implications for CPTSD using an attachment framework are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (7) ◽  
pp. 830-833
Author(s):  
Ryo Matsunuma ◽  
Kozue Suzuki ◽  
Yoshinobu Matsuda ◽  
Masanori Mori ◽  
Hiroaki Watanabe ◽  
...  

Abstract Death rattle occurs during the last days of life, and relatives of those afflicted frequently report that it is very distressful. However, there is no effective treatment for it. The purpose of this study was to investigate the perceptions of Japanese palliative care physicians in clinical practice in Japan. We conducted a nationwide survey of 268 physicians via an anonymous, self-report questionnaire. We assessed pharmacological and non-pharmacological management and anticholinergic agent choice. One hundred eighty-nine physicians (70.5%) returned the questionnaires. Fifty-five participants (29.1%) treating patients with Type-1 (real death rattle) and 36 participants (19%) treating patients with Type-2 (pseudo-death rattle) death rattle reported that they would frequently administer an anticholinergic agent. One-fourth would administer scopolamine butylbromide or scopolamine hydrobromide. In conclusion, more Japanese palliative care physicians thought that anticholinergic agents might be effective for treating Type-1 death rattle rather than Type-2. Further clinical trials of these agents are needed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 38 (7) ◽  
pp. 966-987
Author(s):  
Meenakshi Menon ◽  
Harriet C. A. Moyes ◽  
Christina M. Bradley

We hypothesized that in adolescence, maladaptive narcissism interacts with low self-esteem to predict a preoccupied attachment style ( attachment for self-affirmation hypothesis), and with high self-esteem to predict an avoidant attachment style ( attachment for self-enhancement hypothesis). We expected gender differences in narcissistic adolescents’ attachment strategies, with girls more likely to be motivated to self-affirm, and boys more likely to self-enhance. Early adolescents in England ( N = 306, 156 girls, 150 boys, [Formula: see text] age = 13.38 years) responded to self-report measures of narcissism, self-esteem, and attachment styles to mother and a friend. Results supported the attachment for self-enhancement hypothesis only. For adolescent boys (but not girls) with high self-esteem, narcissism was associated with higher avoidant attachment toward the mother and a friend. The results suggest that maladaptive narcissism might derail normative separation-individuation processes in adolescent boys, thus contributing to their adoption of an avoidant attachment style with close relationship partners.


1997 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 3252-3266 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Hutchison ◽  
J. Tsoukatos ◽  
J. O. Dostrovsky

Hutchison, W. D., J. Tsoukatos, and J. O. Dostrovsky. Quantitative analysis of orofacial thermoreceptive neurons in the superficial medullary dorsal horn of the rat. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 3252–3266, 1997. Surprisingly little is known concerning the central processing of innocuous thermal somatosensory information. The aim of the present study was to obtain quantitative data on the characteristics of neurons in the rat superficial medullary dorsal horn (sMDH) that responded to innocuous thermal stimulation of the rat's face and tongue. Single-unit extracellular recordings were obtained in chloralose-urethane anesthetized rats. A total of 153 thermoreceptive neurons was studied. Of these, 146 were excited by cooling and inhibited by warming and were classified as COLD cells. The remaining seven cells were excited by innocuous warming of the skin or tongue. Of 123 COLD cells tested, 33% were excited by touch and 22% by pinch stimuli delivered to the thermoreceptive field. Of the 50 COLD cells tested, 46% were excited also by noxious heating (≥50°C for 5 s). Most (82/121) of the receptive fields were located on the upper lip, 25 on the tongue, and most of the remaining on the lower lip. Receptive fields were generally small (1–5 mm2). In some experiments, electrical stimulation in the thalamus was performed, and nine COLD cells could be activated antidromically. The responses of 38 COLD cells to incremental 5°C cooling steps were examined quantitatively. Thermal stimuli were applied to facial or lingual receptive fields of sMDH neurons with a computer-controlled Peltier thermode starting from 33°C, decreasing to 8 or 3°C, and returning to 33°C. Most COLD cells (26/38) had both static and dynamic responses; 7 had mainly dynamic and 5 mainly static responses to step decreases in temperature. Rat sMDH COLD cells could be classified into three groups depending on their stimulus-response functions. The first group ( Type 1, n = 19) had a bell-shaped static stimulus response function. The second group ( Type 2) had a high maintained or increasing static firing rate as the temperature decreased <18°C ( n = 10). Type 3 COLD cells had mainly dynamic properties ( n = 7). Many of the cells in all groups were excited by noxious mechanical stimulation. Type 2 cells differed from the other two groups in that most did not respond to noxious thermal stimuli (hot) and many responded to innocuous tactile stimuli. Neurons from each of the three groups of COLD cells could be activated antidromically from contralateral thalamus. These data suggest that there is little central processing of thermal information at the first central synapse for Type 1 neurons, however, the responses of the other two types may be due to central processing and convergence. The demonstration of rat sMDH COLD cells with distinctive stimulus-response functions to thermal shifts suggests separate functional roles of these neurons in the ascending thermal sensory pathway.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Lacasa ◽  
Merce Mitjavila ◽  
Susana Ochoa ◽  
Nekane Balluerka

<p>Studies regarding the relationship between attachment and psychopathology during adolescence have been performed separately for clinical and nonclinical adolescents and have used different assessment measures, which together might produce a methodological bias that increases the association between attachment and psychopathology. With the aim of avoiding this bias, the present study used identical measures to explore the relationship between attachment styles and internalizing or externalizing symptoms in clinical and nonclinical groups of adolescents. The sample consisted of  258 adolescents,129 clinical and 129 nonclinical,  aged between 14 and 18 years. The adolescents in each group were matched for age, gender, and socioeconomic status. Attachment was assessed using the CaMir Q-sort,(Pierrehumbert et al., 1996) and psychopathological symptoms were assessed by means of the Youth Self Report (YSR). The relationships between attachment and psychopathology were similar for clinical and nonclinical adolescents.  In both groups a preoccupied attachment style predicted internalizing and externalizing symptoms, somatic complaints, anxious-fearful behavior, verbal aggression, attention-seeking behavior, and thinking problems.  Compared to previous studies, this research has made it possible to identify broader, stronger, and more specific associations between preoccupied attachment style and psychopathological symptoms in adolescents.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 679-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew P. Allen ◽  
Lynda Loughnane

What is the relationship between the creative process and cognition and perception? Lynda Loughnane, a master’s student in Art and Process in Crawford College of Art and Design, Cork, Ireland interviewed Dr Andrew P. Allen about the subject. Areas covered include mindfulness, Type 1 and Type 2 thinking, stage theories of creativity, engagement with the art process and the artwork, phenomenology and consciousness with and without self report. The interview was constructed to cover a wide range of subject matter, so as to gather as much information as possible in layman's language about the cognitive process in relation to creativity and interaction with art.


2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 792-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rozalina McCoy ◽  
Holly Van Houten ◽  
Jeanette Ziegenfuss ◽  
Nilay Shah ◽  
Robert Wermers ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 198-199
Author(s):  
Paola Ballerini ◽  
Laura Callegari ◽  
Ivan Del Prato ◽  
Daniele Moglia ◽  
Annamaria Cerrotta ◽  
...  

One hundred and ninty-six breast cyst fluid samples from 78 consecutive patients with multiple cysts were subdivided according to the K+/Na+ ratio: type 1 (K+/Na+ ratio > 1) and type 2 (K+/Na+ ratio ≤ 1). Cysts of the same type were found in 57.7 % of patients (concordant group). Such a finding suggests that in patients bearing multiple cysts, all aspirated fluids need to be classified on the basis of their cationic composition. In the concordant group, type 1 cysts were more frequent than in the discordant group (80.3 % vs 59.5 %, P = 0.002). High K+/Na+ ratios (> 4.0) were present in 64 % of type 1 cysts in the concordant group compared to 37.7 % in the discordant group (P = 0.001), which suggests a different activity of the epithelium lining the cyst wall.


Author(s):  
Andreas Schmitt ◽  
Bernhard Kulzer ◽  
Dominic Ehrmann ◽  
Thomas Haak ◽  
Norbert Hermanns

AimsMeasurement tools to evaluate self-management behavior are useful for diabetes research and clinical practice. The Diabetes Self-Management Questionnaire (DSMQ) was introduced in 2013 and has become a widely used tool. This article presents a revised and updated version, DSMQ-R, and evaluates its properties in assessing self-management practices in type 1 diabetes (T1D) and type 2 diabetes (T2D).MethodsThe DSMQ-R is a multidimensional questionnaire with 27 items regarding essential self-management practices for T1D and T2D (including diabetes-adjusted eating, glucose testing/monitoring, medication taking, physical activity and cooperation with the diabetes team). For the revised form, the original items were partially amended and the wording was updated; eleven items were newly added. The tool was applied as part of health-related surveys in five clinical studies (two cross-sectional, three prospective) including a total of 1,447 people with T1D and T2D. Using this data base, clinimetric properties were rigorously tested.ResultsThe analyses showed high internal and retest reliability coefficients for the total scale and moderate to high coefficients for the subscales. Reliability coefficients for scales including the new items were consistently higher. Correlations with convergent criteria and related variables supported validity. Responsiveness was supported by significant short to medium term changes in prospective studies. Significant associations with glycemic outcomes were observed for DSMQ-R-assessed medication taking, glucose monitoring and eating behaviors.ConclusionsThe results support good clinimetric properties of the DSMQ-R. The tool can be useful for research and clinical practice and may facilitate the identification of improvable self-management practices in individuals.


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