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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Jul 20.
Published in final edited form as: J Youth Adolesc. 2019 Aug 14;48(12):2377–2390. doi: 10.1007/s10964-019-01102-2

Table 3.

Differences in pathways within contexts between types of exposure to violence (witnessing vs. victimization) predicting various forms of dating aggression.

Physical Aggression Threatening Behaviors Emotional Abuse
B (S.E) β B (S.E) β B (S.E) β
Witness School .03 (.01) .14 ** .03 (.01) .14* .06 (.01) .25***
Victim School .04 (.02) .14** −.02 (.02) −.09 −.03 (.02) −.10
Witness Community .03 (.01) .15** .02 (.01) .08 .02 (.01) .07
Victim Community −.00 (.02) −.00 −.01 (.02) −.01 −.02 (.03) −.03
Witness Home .05 (.02) .11* .08 (.02) .20*** .06 (.03) .12*
Victim Home .05 (.03) .11* .02 (.03) .05 −.00 (.03) −.00
Female .17 (.03) .29*** .15 (.03) .27*** .17 (.03) .25***
Ethnic minority .06 (.04) .08 .07 (.04) .09 .05 (.05) .06
SES −.03 (.02) −.09 −.02 (.02) −.07 .01 (.02) .03
R-Square
 Dating Violence .22 .20 .16
Fit Statistics
 Chi-Square 494.88***
 DF 267
 CFI .93
 TLI .92
 RMSEA .04
 SRMR .04

N=484

*

p < .05,

**

p < .01,

***

p < .001

Significant differences are in bold font.