Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence

Research has shown numerous adverse long-term consequences on child abuse victims which may involve physical injuries and psychological trauma. There is also a growing perception that maltreated children are at a greater risk of propagating violence in the community. In our paper, we seek to e...

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Main Authors: Chau, Kerr Qi, Tng, Germaine, Leong, Dorothea Si Min
Other Authors: Qiu Lin
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67042
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-670422019-12-10T11:23:28Z Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence Chau, Kerr Qi Tng, Germaine Leong, Dorothea Si Min Qiu Lin School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities Research has shown numerous adverse long-term consequences on child abuse victims which may involve physical injuries and psychological trauma. There is also a growing perception that maltreated children are at a greater risk of propagating violence in the community. In our paper, we seek to explain how the experience of abuse creates multiple pathways to emotional dysregulation, which then predisposes a victim towards perpetuating intergenerational violence. We reviewed the neurobiological outcomes, psychological outcomes, and the influences of parenting practices. We found that vulnerability of neural structures during a child’s developmental years would increase the risk of traumatic child maltreatment experiences, contributing to future perpetration. Psychological influences such as lowered self-esteem, stigmatization, and poor coping strategies would also cause shifts in victims’ perspectives, contributing to the perpetuation of the cycle of violence. In addition, parental influence was found to contribute substantially to child maltreatment victims’ manifestation of aggression. There are many other factors that may also contribute to the risk of intergenerational abuse, including the stresses of parenting, substance misuse, as well as the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder. Bachelor of Arts 2016-05-11T03:11:58Z 2016-05-11T03:11:58Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67042 en Nanyang Technological University 41 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Chau, Kerr Qi
Tng, Germaine
Leong, Dorothea Si Min
Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
description Research has shown numerous adverse long-term consequences on child abuse victims which may involve physical injuries and psychological trauma. There is also a growing perception that maltreated children are at a greater risk of propagating violence in the community. In our paper, we seek to explain how the experience of abuse creates multiple pathways to emotional dysregulation, which then predisposes a victim towards perpetuating intergenerational violence. We reviewed the neurobiological outcomes, psychological outcomes, and the influences of parenting practices. We found that vulnerability of neural structures during a child’s developmental years would increase the risk of traumatic child maltreatment experiences, contributing to future perpetration. Psychological influences such as lowered self-esteem, stigmatization, and poor coping strategies would also cause shifts in victims’ perspectives, contributing to the perpetuation of the cycle of violence. In addition, parental influence was found to contribute substantially to child maltreatment victims’ manifestation of aggression. There are many other factors that may also contribute to the risk of intergenerational abuse, including the stresses of parenting, substance misuse, as well as the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder.
author2 Qiu Lin
author_facet Qiu Lin
Chau, Kerr Qi
Tng, Germaine
Leong, Dorothea Si Min
format Final Year Project
author Chau, Kerr Qi
Tng, Germaine
Leong, Dorothea Si Min
author_sort Chau, Kerr Qi
title Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
title_short Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
title_full Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
title_fullStr Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
title_full_unstemmed Neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
title_sort neurobiological, psychological and parental influences on the perpetuation of intergenerational violence
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67042
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