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A study conducted in the United Kingdom on behalf of the Society for Research in Child Development by Sara R. Jaffee ''et al.'' (2003) using 'data from an epidemiological sample of 1,116 5-year-old twin pairs and their parents', remarked the following: "Second, despite the fact that fathers who engage in high levels of antisocial behavior make up a small proportion of fathers overall, they are responsible for a disproportionate number of births. For example, Moffitt and colleagues (2002) found that '''although men who engaged in high levels of antisocial behavior constituted only 10% of a birth cohort, they accounted for 27% of the babies fathered by the time the men were age 26'''". | A study conducted in the United Kingdom on behalf of the Society for Research in Child Development by Sara R. Jaffee ''et al.'' (2003) using 'data from an epidemiological sample of 1,116 5-year-old twin pairs and their parents', remarked the following: "Second, despite the fact that fathers who engage in high levels of antisocial behavior make up a small proportion of fathers overall, they are responsible for a disproportionate number of births. For example, Moffitt and colleagues (2002) found that '''although men who engaged in high levels of antisocial behavior constituted only 10% of a birth cohort, they accounted for 27% of the babies fathered by the time the men were age 26'''". | ||
Another study by Carl B. Gacono, PhD ''et al''. (1995) for the The Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (albeit with an low sample size) comparing "select behavior indices between hospitalized insanity acquittees (N = 18) and hospitalized insanity acquittees who successfully malingered (N =18)" concluded that "The malingerers(the study authors called the malingerers 'severe psychopaths') were also significantly more likely to be verbally or physically assaultive, require specialized treatment plans to control their aggression, '''have sexual relations with female staff | Another study by Carl B. Gacono, PhD ''et al''. (1995) for the The Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (albeit with an low sample size) comparing "select behavior indices between hospitalized insanity acquittees (N = 18) and hospitalized insanity acquittees who successfully malingered (N =18)" concluded that "The malingerers(the study authors called the malingerers 'severe psychopaths') were also significantly more likely to be verbally or physically assaultive, require specialized treatment plans to control their aggression, '''have sexual relations with female staff, 39% had such consensual relations with female mental health staff''' (i.e the exact type of women that incels are advised to consult for therapy, my words obviously not the study authors) deal drugs, and be considered an escape risk within the forensic hospital." | ||
Another study by Palmer and Tilley (1995) for The Journal of Sex Research examining the possible evolutionary psychological motives prompting young men to join street gangs revealed that "shows that the gang members in the study reported a significantly greater average number of sex partners during the last 30 days than the non-gang members reported for the same period (M, of 1.67 to 1.22, respectively)" and that "the two greatest total numbers of partners reported in our study were by two gang leaders, who reported 11 and 10 partners, respectively." The studies authors concluded that compared to prior study conducted by Laumann et al.'s examing men in the United States sexual habits; '''"many gang members in our study had as many, or more, sex partners in one month than the average male in Laumann et al.'s study had in one year.'''" | Another study by Palmer and Tilley (1995) for The Journal of Sex Research examining the possible evolutionary psychological motives prompting young men to join street gangs revealed that "shows that the gang members in the study reported a significantly greater average number of sex partners during the last 30 days than the non-gang members reported for the same period (M, of 1.67 to 1.22, respectively)" and that "the two greatest total numbers of partners reported in our study were by two gang leaders, who reported 11 and 10 partners, respectively." The studies authors concluded that compared to prior study conducted by Laumann et al.'s examing men in the United States sexual habits; '''"many gang members in our study had as many, or more, sex partners in one month than the average male in Laumann et al.'s study had in one year.'''" |
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