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Relations Between Self-Reported Adverse Events in Childhood and Hypersexuality in Adult Male Sexual Offenders

NCJ Number
252255
Journal
Archives of Sexual Behavior Volume: 46 Issue: 3 Dated: April 2017 Pages: 707-720
Author(s)
Drew A. Kingston; Franklyn J. Graham; Raymond A. Knight
Date Published
April 2017
Length
14 pages
Annotation
Since hypersexuality, or extreme normophilic sexual urges and behavior, has been found to be an important predictor of recidivism among sex offenders and continues to be discussed widely in the literature, the current study investigated the developmental roots of this construct in a sample of 529 adult male sexual offenders, who were administered the Multidimensional Assessment of Sex and Aggression.
Abstract
Physical, psychological, and sexual abuse experiences were estimated using several scales of early development. Psychological abuse in childhood and adolescence, especially by a father, was found to be the most prominent predictor of subsequent hypersexual thoughts and behaviors. The accumulation of abuse types, however, was also associated with a monotonic increase in the latent trait of hypersexuality. The consequences of these results for conceptualizations of the construct are discussed. (Publisher abstract modified)