Sex Differences in the Etiology of Victimization in Adulthood

Citation

Joyner-Carpanini, Bridget & Beaver, Kevin M. (2024). Sex Differences in the Etiology of Victimization in Adulthood. Evolutionary Psychology. vol. 22 (3)

Abstract

Until relatively recently, the study of victimization has been largely outside the purview of behavioral geneticists and evolutionary psychologists. Recent victimology research, however, has shown that genetic and evolutionary forces are connected to the risk of victimization. The current study expands on these findings by examining whether genetic influences differentially explain victimization in males and females. To do so, we use a sample of sibling pairs drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health; N?=?4,244). The analyses revealed no significant quantitative sex differences in the etiology of adult victimization. However, the results of this study do highlight the importance of accounting for genetic factors when studying the etiology of specific types of adult victimization. We conclude by discussing the implications of the current study for future research.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1177/14747049241267950

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Evolutionary Psychology

Author(s)

Joyner-Carpanini, Bridget
Beaver, Kevin M.

Year Published

2024

Volume Number

22

Issue Number

3

ISSN/ISBN

1474-7049

DOI

10.1177/14747049241267950

Reference ID

10483