“…For example, reactions to infidelity could conceivably range from indifference to extreme reactions including family disruption (Lusterman, 2005), spouse revenge filicide (Rougé-Maillar, Jousset, Gaudin, Bouju, & Penneau, 2005;West, Friedman, & Resnick, 2009), manslaughter (Sherman & Hoffmann, 2007), murder-suicide (Eliason, 2009), suicide or murder (Scheinkman, 2005), and psychological disorders (Cano & O'Leary, 2000). Boon, Deveau, and Alibhai (2009) report that victims tend to overcompensate for their injury and inadvertently promote a cycle of violence and contend, "The potential for escalation of conflict and therefore for harm to self, partner, and relationship may thus be considerable even when the initial provocation or revenge response is mild" (p. 765). The ways in which injured partners respond to betrayal has been addressed by Yoshimura (2007), who identified a set of nine revenge act categories that include active distancing, physical aggressiveness, reputation defamation, new relationship initiation, verbal exchange, resource removal, property damage, uncertainty increase, and other acts that do not fit into the aforementioned categories.…”