685 Psychological Partner Abuse

April 15, 2026 00:01:17
685 Psychological Partner Abuse
Florida Tech Psychology Science Minutes
685 Psychological Partner Abuse

Apr 15 2026 | 00:01:17

/

Show Notes

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Is psychological abuse a myth really not that serious? Italian researchers studied 200 young women in heterosexual romantic relationships to understand how beliefs that downplay or excuse partner violence relate to repeated psychological abuse. Participants completed surveys about their beliefs about domestic violence, whether they experienced psychological abuse in the last year, whether they saw that behavior as a problem, and how acceptable they considered it in a relationship. Results Women who more strongly endorse interpersonal violence myths she deserved it are more likely to accept psychological abuse called names embarrassed when in others presence. However, this link operates through their tendency to view that abuse as unproblematic. In other words, believing common myths about interpersonal violence is associated with minimizing psychological abuse, which in turn relates to greater acceptance of it. Notably, this pattern appeared only among women who reported experiencing psychological abuse in the past year. Conclusions what beliefs about relationships are we normalizing when someone describes controlling or humiliating behavior? Do we label it clearly as interpersonal violence? Challenge myths when you hear them name psychological abuse for what it is. Interpersonal violence Clear language and informed awareness may help reduce the risk of repeated harm.

Other Episodes

Episode

September 07, 2022 00:01:24
Episode Cover

507 Noticing Nature

Listen

Episode

October 09, 2024 00:01:07
Episode Cover

593 School Belonging

Listen

Episode

March 22, 2023 00:01:22
Episode Cover

529 Checking In and Reaching Out

Listen