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Attachment and brooding rumination during children’s transition to adolescence: the moderating role of effortful control Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-05-10 Jallu Lindblom, Guy Bosmans
ABSTRACT Brooding rumination is a maladaptive form of emotion regulation and confers a risk for psychopathology. Insecure attachment and low cognitive self-regulation are important antecedents of brooding. Yet, little is known about the developmental interplay between these two systems. Thus, we tested how children’s attachment and cognitive self-regulation, conceptualized as effortful control (EC)
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Attachment to fathers and mothers in preschoolers with an Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-04-25 David Oppenheim, Nina Koren-Karie, Tirtsa Joels, Lior Hamburger, Yael Maccabi, Michal Slonim, Nurit Yirmiya
ABSTRACT We examined whether the Strange Situation Procedure (SSP) is applicable not only for assessing children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and their mothers but also with their fathers. Forty preschoolers with ASD were observed in the SSP with their mothers and 39 with their fathers. Unexpectedly, the SSP was found to be not applicable (NA) to 25% of the SSPs with fathers because levels of
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Do empathy and oxytocin predict responsiveness to a crying infant simulator in expecting and non-expecting couples? A multilevel study Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-04-19 Maria Kaźmierczak, Marinus H. van Ijzendoorn, Marian Bakermans-Kranenburg
ABSTRACT Infant crying is a strong emotional stimulus that elicits caregiving responses in adults. Here we examine the role of empathy (measured with the Polish version of Interpersonal Reactivity Index) and salivary oxytocin in modulating sensitive responsiveness to a crying infant simulator in two groups of heterosexual couples: 111 expecting or 110 not expecting a baby. Sensitive responsiveness
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Attachment theory’s core hypotheses in rural Andean Peru Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-04-07 Katherine Fourment, Magaly Nóblega, Judi Mesman
ABSTRACT This is the first study aiming to test two universality claims of attachment theory within a rural Andean sample from Cusco, Peru. A total of 69 mothers and their children (6 to 36 months) participated. Child attachment security was assessed with the Attachment Q-set (AQS), maternal sensitivity was measured during three naturalistic episodes (free interaction, bathing, and feeding) with the
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Correction Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-03-27
(2022). Correction. Attachment & Human Development. Ahead of Print.
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Parents’ resolution of their child’s diagnosis: A scoping review Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Efrat Sher-Censor, Ravit Shahar-Lahav
(2022). Parents’ resolution of their child’s diagnosis: A scoping review. Attachment & Human Development. Ahead of Print.
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Taking perspective on attachment theory and research: nine fundamental questions Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2022-01-24 Ross A. Thompson, Jeffry A. Simpson, Lisa J. Berlin
ABSTRACT Since its inception more than 50 years ago, attachment theory has become one of the most influential viewpoints in the behavioral sciences. What have we learned during this period about its fundamental questions? In this paper, we summarize the conclusions of an inquiry into this question involving more than 75 researchers. Each responded to one of nine “fundamental questions” in attachment
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The contributions of maternal oxytocin and maternal sensitivity to infant attachment security Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-12-28 Jane Kohlhoff, Lisa Karlov, Mark Dadds, Bryanne Barnett, Derrick Silove, Valsamma Eapen
ABSTRACT This study investigated links between maternal postnatal oxytocin, maternal sensitivity, and infant attachment security. At 3-months postpartum, participants (n=88) took part in a structured parent-infant interaction. Maternal oxytocin levels were assessed via blood, before and after the interaction. At 12-months postpartum, mother-child dyads completed the Strange Situation Procedure. Neither
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Scripted attachment representations of current romantic relationships: measurement and validation Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-12-28 Marissa D. Nivison, Katie M. DeWitt, Glenn I. Roisman, Theodore E. A. Waters
ABSTRACT This report describes the development and validation of a new coding system for the Current Relationship Interview (CRI) that assesses individual differences in secure base script knowledge with respect to adult romantic partners. Drawing on data from the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation (N = 116) a coding system was developed to parallel the secure base script coding system
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Failure to resolve loss and compromised mentalizing in female inpatients with major depressive disorder Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-12-24 Melitta Fischer-Kern, Anna Tmej, Andrea Naderer, Johannes Zimmermann, Tobias Nolte
ABSTRACT Attachment and mentalizing are central concepts in research on the etiology, course, and treatment of depression. The goal of this cross-sectional study was to clarify the unique value of these constructs in characterizing the presence, severity, and chronicity of depression. We examined 50 female inpatients suffering from Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) in comparison to 47 matched healthy
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Longitudinal associations between self-reported attachment dimensions and neurostructural development from adolescence to early adulthood Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-11-03 Lara MC Puhlmann, Mélodie Derome, Larisa Morosan, Deniz Kilicel, Pascal Vrtička, Martin Debbané
ABSTRACT The existing literature suggests that individual differences in attachment may be associated with differential trajectories of structural brain development. In addition to maturation during infancy and childhood, developmental trajectories are characteristic of adolescence, a period marked by increasingly complex interpersonal relationships and significant neurostructural and functional plasticity
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Can the family drawing be a useful tool for assessing attachment representations in children? A systematic review and meta-analysis Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-11-02 Cecilia Serena Pace, Stefania Muzi, Francesco Madera, Alessandra Sansò, Giulio Cesare Zavattini
ABSTRACT A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted to evaluate the quality and validity of Family Drawings (FD) with an Attachment-Based Coding System in assessing attachment representations among pre-school and school-age children. A literature search in notable databases identified 645 records, of which 20 were eligible after screening and quality assessment. Results showed: 1) ABCD attachment
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Race, discrimination, and racism as “growing points” for consideration: attachment theory and research with African American families Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-26 Stephanie Irby Coard
ABSTRACT The author acknowledges attachment theory as a widely accepted analytic paradigm that has generated creative and impactful research for over half a century. This acknowledgment is followed with commentary on what the author considers critically relevant yet unacknowledged topics of inquiry in the attachment literature. The author contends that race, discrimination, and unaddressed systemic
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Longitudinal study of the cascading effects of racial discrimination on parenting and adjustment among African American youth Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-26 Velma McBride Murry, Catherine M. Gonzalez, Rachel A. Hanebutt, Dominique Bulgin, Erica E. Coates, Misha N. Inniss-Thompson, Marlena L. Debreaux, Walter E. Wilson, Dalton Abel, McKenna B. Cortez
ABSTRACT Attachment theory posits that parenting plays akey role in children’s attachment and subsequent development. Given the normativity of racial discrimination on everyday life experiences of African American families, there is a need to integrate historical and socio-environmental processes in studies to understand how minoritized parents raise secure and stable children. Results from the current
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Love in a time of anti-Blackness: social rank, attachment, and race in psychotherapy Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-21 Daniel J. Gaztambide
ABSTRACT This paper draws on critical race theory and research on attachment, social rank and dehumanization to theorize the implications of addressing anti-Blackness in psychotherapy with both Black and non-Black clients in the context of White Supremacy. Drawing on and critiquing a recent review of attachment theory and race, the author draws on historical and empirical research outlining the contours
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Commentary: attachment theory goes to school Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-14 Sandra Graham
(2021). Commentary: attachment theory goes to school. Attachment & Human Development. Ahead of Print.
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Inflammatory and environmental contributions to social information processing Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-08 Amanda Venta, Jeremy Bechelli, Johanna Bick, Trisha M. Brewer, Danielle Boisvert, Jessica Wells, Richard H. Lewis, Todd Armstrong
ABSTRACT It appears that social information processing is negatively affected by inflammation, but extant research is primarily experimental and comes from laboratory-based manipulations of inflammatory states. We aimed to examine interactions between inflammation, stressful life events, and positive memories of childhood relations with parents in relation to social information processing in 201 adults
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Neighborhood poverty, allostatic load, and changes in cellular aging in African American young adults: the moderating role of attachment Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-10-07 Katherine B. Ehrlich, Tianyi Yu, Aishat Sadiq, Gene H. Brody
ABSTRACT Attachment experiences are thought to contribute to physical health across the lifespan. Evidence suggests that attachment style may serve as a protective factor for individuals’ physical health by mitigating the negative effects of social and environmental risk factors. In the present study, we evaluated how attachment styles may moderate the link between African American adolescents’ exposure
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Mothers’ preparation for bias and responses to children’s distress predict positive adjustment among Black children: an attachment perspective Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-23 Angel S. Dunbar, Fantasy T. Lozada, Lydia HaRim Ahn, Esther M. Leerkes
ABSTRACT Traditional conceptualizations of maternal sensitivity overlook the adaptive function of some parenting behaviors. This study examined mothers’ preparation for bias, suppression responses, and supportive responses to their Black children’s distress as indicators of secure base provision at age five and predictors of children’s age six emotional and behavioral self-regulation. Participants
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Associations between Turkish incarcerated mothers’ sensitivity and their co-residing children’s attachment: The moderating role of children’s temperament Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-20 Zülal İşcanoğlu, Zehra Uçanok
ABSTRACT This study investigated the associations between incarcerated mothers’ sensitivity and their co-residing children’s attachment security. Furthermore, the moderating role of children’s temperament on the associations between maternal sensitivity and children’s attachment security was examined. The study sample consisted of 84 incarcerated mothers (Mage = 29.9, SD = 5.6) and their 12- to 43-month-old
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Working toward anti-racist perspectives in attachment theory, research, and practice Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-16 Jessica A. Stern, Oscar Barbarin, Jude Cassidy
ABSTRACT Recent social movements have illuminated systemic inequities in U.S. society, including within the social sciences. Thus, it is essential that attachment researchers and practitioners engage in reflection and action to work toward anti-racist perspectives in the field. Our aims in this paper are (1) to share the generative conversations and debates that arose in preparing the Special Issue
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Pathways linking attachment and depressive symptoms for Black and White adolescents: do race and neighborhood racism matter? Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-16 Jessica A. Stern, Jason D. Jones, Bridget M. Nortey, Carl W. Lejuez, Jude Cassidy
ABSTRACT Decades of evidence demonstrate that insecure attachment is associated with increased risk for depressive symptoms. Yet research has focused on predominantly White samples, with little attention to whether developmental pathways vary by social-contextual factors like racial identity and neighborhood racism. This study examines whether longitudinal links between attachment style and depressive
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Attachment research and anti-racism: learning from Black and Brown scholars Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-09 José M. Causadias, Kamryn S. Morris, Rodrigo A. Cárcamo, Helen A. Neville, Magaly Nóblega, Fernando Salinas-Quiroz, Jaime R. Silva
ABSTRACT Preliminary evidence suggests that people and scholars of African and/or Latin American and Caribbean origin are often under-represented in mainstream attachment scholarship. In this commentary, we highlight the difficulty of conducting attachment theory research outside of the United States, particularly in Latin American countries. We reflect on the contributions by the authors of this special
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Father–child attachment in Black families: Risk and protective processes Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-09 Fanita A. Tyrell, Ann S. Masten
ABSTRACT Theoretical and empirical work on Black fathering has been grounded in a deficit perspective. Scholarship has focused on absenteeism and incarceration of Black fathers, neglecting their positive roles as well as the structural inequalities and challenges Black fathers face. This paper highlights the significance of positive fathering in Black youth development, with a focus on the protective
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Attachment perspectives on race, prejudice, and anti-racism Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-09 Jessica A. Stern, Oscar Barbarin, Jude Cassidy (Eds.)
ABSTRACT Central to attachment theory is the idea that behavior in close relationships can best be understood in context. Although decades of research have illuminated cross-cultural patterns of caregiving and attachment, there remains a critical need to increase research with African American families, examine the specific sociocultural context of systemic anti-Black racism, and integrate the rich
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Enhancing the “broaden-and-build” cycle of attachment security as a means of overcoming prejudice, discrimination, and racism Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-09
ABSTRACT Attachment theory emphasizes both the importance of supportive relationship partners, beginning in infancy, for developing a sense of security, and the adaptive benefits of this sense. In this article, we consider bolstering the sense of attachment security as a means of reducing and overcoming prejudice, discrimination, and racism. We review basic concepts of attachment theory, focusing on
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Parent-child relationship and child anger proneness in infancy and attachment security at toddler age: a short-term longitudinal study of mother- and father-child dyads Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-09-07
ABSTRACT Early parent-child relationship and child negative emotionality have both been studied as contributors to attachment security, but few studies have examined whether negative emotionality can moderate effects of parent-child relationship on security and whether the process is comparable across mother- and father-child dyads and different security measures. In 102 community families, we observed
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Attachment in retrospect and prospect Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-07-08 Kazuko Y. Behrens
(2021). Attachment in retrospect and prospect. Attachment & Human Development: Vol. 23, Attachment in Retrospect and Prospect, Guest Edited by: Kazuko Y. Behrens, pp. 351-354.
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Six attachment discourses: convergence, divergence and relay Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-05-12 Robbie Duschinsky, Lianne Bakkum, Julia M. M. Mannes, Guy C. M. Skinner, Melody Turner, Alissa Mann, Barry Coughlan, Sophie Reijman, Sarah Foster, Helen Beckwith
ABSTRACT Attachment concepts are used in diverging ways, which has caused confusion in communication among researchers, among practitioners, and between researchers and practitioners, and hinders their potential for collaboration. In this essay we explore how attachment concepts may vary in meaning across six different domains: popular discourses, developmental science, social psychological science
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Cornerstones and discourses in attachment study: celebrating the publication of a new landmark Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-05-11 Everett Waters, Dean D. Petters
ABSTRACT Cornerstones in attachment research is a landmark history of five major research groups that have helped establish the empirical foundations of the Bowlby-Ainsworth attachment tradition. This essay highlights Duschinsky’s use of historical methodology rather than the narrative-style review more familiar to psychologists. We then turn to a recurring theme in the book, the inconsistent use of
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Replication crisis lost in translation? On translational caution and premature applications of attachment theory Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-05-05 Marinus H. Van IJzendoorn, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg
ABSTRACT In the biomedical, behavioral and neurobiological sciences reproducibility and replicability of research results have become a major issue. The question is whether attachment research is also plagued by lack of replicability, and if so whether one can speak of a crisis? Furthermore, discussions about the applicability of attachment research findings to policy and (clinical) practice have recently
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Revisiting the founder of attachment theory: memories and informal reflections Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-05-10 Mary Main
ABSTRACT In commemorating Robbie Duschinsky’s publication of Cornerstones of Attachment Research, I have decided that I could best serve this special issue by revisiting the founder of attachment theory, John Bowlby, and portraying him as a man above and beyond the founder of attachment theory based on my personal and intellectual relationship with him. The goal is to provide the reader, even those
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Associations of peripheral blood DNA methylation and estimated monocyte proportion differences during infancy with toddler attachment style Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-07-01 Sarah M. Merrill, Nicole Gladish, Maggie P. Fu, Sarah R. Moore, Chaini Konwar, Gerald F. Giesbrecht, Julia L. MacIssac, Michael S. Kobor, Nicole L. Letourneau
ABSTRACT Attachment is a motivational system promoting felt security to a caregiver resulting in a persistent internal working model of interpersonal behavior. Attachment styles are developed in early social environments and predict future health and development outcomes with potential biological signatures, such as epigenetic modifications like DNA methylation (DNAm). Thus, we hypothesized infant
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Intergenerational transmission of trauma from mother to infant: the mediating role of disrupted prenatal maternal representations of the child Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-06-08 Sarah M. Ahlfs-Dunn, Diane Benoit, Alissa C. Huth-Bocks
ABSTRACT Data from a multi-method, longitudinal study involving a community sample (N = 120) of pregnant women aged 18–42 were used to examine disrupted maternal representations of the child as a mechanism of the transmission of trauma from mother to infant. Using structural equation modeling, the best fitting model indicated that severity of mothers’ childhood interpersonal trauma was associated with
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Improving the parent–child relationship and child adjustment through parental reflective functioning group intervention Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Atara Menashe-Grinberg, Shlomit Shneor, Gal Meiri, Naama Atzaba-Poria
ABSTRACT Parental reflective functioning (PRF) is a core element in the parent–child relationship. This study set out to investigate changes in PRF following the DUET program, a 12-week group intervention program. We proposed that the DUET intervention would enhance maternal reflective capacities, resulting in better mother-child emotional availability, better child self-regulation, and decreased child
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Prospecting the attachment research field: a move to the level of engagement Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-26 Carlo Schuengel, Marije L. Verhage, Robbie Duschinsky
ABSTRACT This paper prospected the evidence synthesized in meta-analyses on child–parent attachment to discuss its implications for the future of attachment research. Based on the 75 identified meta-analyses, effect size benchmarks may need to be adjusted to small (r = .10), medium (r = .20), and large (r = .30). Topics of attachment meta-analyses predominantly (53%) reflected interest in testing theory
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Growing points in attachment disorganization: looking back to advance forward Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-23 John D. Haltigan, Marco Del Giudice, Soha Khorsand
ABSTRACT In this special issue paper we reflect on the next generation of attachment research with a focus on disorganization, a central but still poorly understood topic in this area. We suggest that progress will be facilitated by a return to attachment theory’s evolutionary roots, and to the emphasis on biological function that inspired Bowlby’s original thinking. Increased interdisciplinary cross-fertilization
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The God, the blood, and the fuzzy: reflections on Cornerstones and two target articles Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-23 Pehr Granqvist
ABSTRACT In response to Cornerstones of attachment research and the target articles, I reflect on three questions. First, what is “attachment”? Although a natural kind, I argue against an essentialist understanding (i.e. in terms of necessary/sufficient conditions for class membership). Instead, the attachment concept must be allowed to have fuzzy boundaries, partly because of how attachments transform
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It takes a village: a call for engaging attachment with adjunct disciplines to clarify “in-house” clinical conundrums Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-22 Or Dagan, Kristin Bernard
ABSTRACT Researchers have long discussed the rich clinical applications of attachment theory. Specifically, clinicians have been compelled by the idea that insecure attachment, broadly speaking, may bring about stressful (real or perceived) interpersonal experiences that increases risk for internalizing symptoms. However, recent meta-analyses examining the links between attachment representations and
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Parental support and insecure attachment development: the cortisol stress response as a moderator Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-19 M. Houbrechts, B. Cuyvers, L. Goossens, P. Bijttebier, A. S. Bröhl, F. Calders, V. Chubar, S. Claes, F. Geukens, K. Van Leeuwen, W. Van Den Noortgate, S. Weyn, G. Bosmans
ABSTRACT The current study investigated whether variations at the level of the cortisol stress response moderate the association between parental support and attachment development. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a one-year longitudinal study with two waves in which 101 children (56% girls, Mage = 11.15, SDage = 0.70) participated. Attachment anxiety and avoidance were measured at baseline (Wave
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Then and now: the legacy and future of attachment research Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-19 L. Alan Sroufe
ABSTRACT Attachment theory rescued psychology from the choice between an untestable psychoanalytic, drive reduction theory and behaviorist positions that were incapable of accounting for development. Theory and research on attachment over the last 5 decades advanced knowledge on vital topics such as the emergence of the self, emotion regulation, resilience, and mental representations. The success of
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Multisystem physiological reactivity during help-seeking for attachment needs in school-aged children: differences as a function of attachment Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-15 Jessica L. Borelli, Gerin Gaskin, Patricia Smiley, Debbie Chung, Ben Shahar, Guy Bosmans
ABSTRACT In this study, we sought to expand on what is currently known regarding autonomic nervous system (ANS) reactivity in middle childhood as a function of attachment. ANS activity includes multiple indices – respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is an index of parasympathetic nervous system activation (PNS) and electrodermal activity (EDA) is an index of sympathetic nervous system activation (SNS)
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Children’s emerging receptive, positive orientation toward their parents in the network of early attachment relationships Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-06 Danming An, Grazyna Kochanska, Nicole Yeager, Neevetha Sivagurunathan, Rochelle Praska, Robin Campbell, Sung Yi Shin
ABSTRACT Early security plays a major role in inaugurating the child’s receptive, positive orientation – a foundation for cooperative parent-child relationships and successful socialization. However, few studies have considered the association between children’s attachments with both mothers and fathers and multiple aspects of children’s receptive, positive orientation, or compared all four attachment
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Attachment hierarchy in Japan: examining the validity of important people interview in Japanese young adults Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Tomotaka Umemura, Sonoka Fusamune, Kazumi Sugimura
ABSTRACT To assess young people’s attachment hierarchy, the Important People Interview (IPI) was developed based on Bowlby’s conceptualization of ethological behavioral systems. The present study examined the validity of the IPI in a sample of Japanese young adults (N = 472; Mage = 20.34, SD = 1.28; females = 53.81%), because Bowlby’s behavioral systems conceptualization has been assumed to be universal
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Mothers’ parental mentalization, attachment dimensions and mother-infant relational patterns Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-03-17 Daphna G. Dollberg
ABSTRACT We examined the links between mothers’ prenatal attachment dimensions, parental mentalization and mother-infant relational patterns. The sample consisted of 68 mother-infant dyads. During pregnancy, mothers reported on attachment-related anxiety and avoidance. When the infants were three months old, the mothers’ parental reflective functioning (PRF) was assessed via the PDI-R2-S interview
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Attachment dimensions and cortisol responses during the strange situation among young children adopted internationally Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-03-15 Nila Shakiba, K. Lee Raby
ABSTRACT Children’s attachments to their parents may help regulate their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axes. Prior research has largely focused on children with relatively consistent and low-risk caregiving histories, resulting in limited knowledge about the associations between attachment quality and HPA axis reactivity among children who have experienced early adversity. This study investigated
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Multiple facets of attachment in residential-care, late adopted, and community adolescents: an interview-based comparative study Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-03-15 Stefania Muzi, Cecilia Serena Pace
ABSTRACT In this study, 117 adolescents (12–19 years) from three groups (39 each), two groups from adverse caregiving environments as placed in residential-care (RC; i.e. istitutions) or late-adopted (LA; i.e. adopted after 12 months), and one of low-risk community adolescents (COM), were compared for the attachment distribution of categories in the Friends and Family Interview (FFI), and in several
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Adult attachment is related to maternal neural response to infant cues: an ERP study Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Amanda F. Lowell, Jaclyn Dell, Marc N. Potenza, Lane Strathearn, Linda C. Mayes, Helena J. V. Rutherford
ABSTRACT Maternal attachment security is an important predictor of caregiving . However, little is known regarding the neurobiological mechanisms by which attachment influences processing of infant cues, a critical component of caregiving. We examined whether attachment security, measured by the Adult Attachment Interview, might relate to neural responses to infant cues using event-related potentials
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Attachment and attitudes toward children: effects of security priming in parents and non-parents Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-02-09 Jason D. Jones, Jessica A. Stern, Megan H. Fitter, Mario Mikulincer, Phillip R. Shaver, Jude Cassidy
ABSTRACT The present two-study investigation is the first to examine whether experimentally boosting attachment security (security priming) affects attitudes in the parenting domain for both parents and non-parents. Mothers (n = 72) and childless undergraduates (n = 82) were randomly assigned to a neutral or a secure prime condition and then completed measures of implicit attitudes (a child-focused
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The significance of mothers’ attachment representations for vagal responding during interactions with infants Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-22 Nanxi Xu, Ashley M. Groh
ABSTRACT Little is known about the significance of mothers’ attachment for neurobiological responding during interactions with infants. To address this gap, this study examined links between mothers’ (N = 139) attachment representations and dynamic change in respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) while interacting with infants in the Still-Face Procedure (SFP). Mothers higher on secure base script knowledge
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The significance of mothers' attachment representations for vagal responding during interactions with infants. Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-22 Nanxi Xu,Ashley M Groh
Little is known about the significance of mothers' attachment for neurobiological responding during interactions with infants. To address this gap, this study examined links between mothers' (N = 139) attachment representations and dynamic change in respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) while interacting with infants in the Still-Face Procedure (SFP). Mothers higher on secure base script knowledge (SBSK)
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Brain responses to social cues of attachment in mid-childhood Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-19 Margerete J.S. Schoett, Ulrike Basten, Ralf Deichmann, Christian J. Fiebach, Tamara Fischmann
ABSTRACT Physical separation from caregivers activates attachment-related behaviors. However, neural underpinnings of this biological mechanism in humans and their development are poorly understood. We examined via functional MRI brain responses to pictorial representations of separation as a function of attachment-security, attachment-avoidance, and attachment-anxiety measured using the Child-Attachment-Interview
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Infant mental health home visiting: intervention dosage and therapist experience interact to support improvements in maternal reflective functioning Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-11 Ann M. Stacks, Jennifer M. Jester, Kristyn Wong, Alissa Huth-Bocks, Holly Brophy-Herb, Jamie Lawler, Jessica Riggs, Julie Ribaudo, Maria Muzik, Katherine L. Rosenblum
ABSTRACT This study examined changes in parental reflective functioning (PRF) among mothers enrolled in Infant Mental Health-Home Visiting (IMH-HV) and explored whether parental risk, treatment dosage or therapist experience predicted change in PRF. Participants included 75 mothers and their children who were enrolled in IMH-HV delivered by Community Mental Health therapists. Results indicated significant
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Attachment goes to court: child protection and custody issues Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-11 Tommie Forslund, Pehr Granqvist, Marinus H. van IJzendoorn, Avi Sagi-Schwartz, Danya Glaser, Miriam Steele, Mårten Hammarlund, Carlo Schuengel, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Howard Steele, Phillip R. Shaver, Ulrike Lux, John Simmonds, Deborah Jacobvitz, Ashley M. Groh, Kristin Bernard, Chantal Cyr, Nancy L. Hazen, Sarah Foster, Elia Psouni, Philip A. Cowan, Carolyn Pape Cowan, Anne Rifkin-Graboi
ABSTRACT Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but misunderstandings are widespread and sometimes result in misapplications. The aim of this consensus statement is, therefore, to enhance understanding, counter misinformation, and steer family-court utilisation of attachment theory in a supportive, evidence-based direction, especially with regard
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Probing the association between maternal anxious attachment style and mother-child brain-to-brain coupling during passive co-viewing of visual stimuli Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2020-12-28 Atiqah Azhari, Giulio Gabrieli, Andrea Bizzego, Marc H. Bornstein, Gianluca Esposito
ABSTRACT Brain-to-brain coupling during co-viewing of video stimuli reflects similar intersubjective mentalisation processes. During an everyday joint activity of watching video stimuli (television shows) with her child, an anxiously attached mother’s preoccupation with her child is likely to distract her from understanding the mental state of characters in the show. To test the hypothesis that reduced
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Attachment goes to court: child protection and custody issues Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-11 Tommie Forslund, Pehr Granqvist, Marinus H. van IJzendoorn, Avi Sagi-Schwartz, Danya Glaser, Miriam Steele, Mårten Hammarlund, Carlo Schuengel, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Howard Steele, Phillip R. Shaver, Ulrike Lux, John Simmonds, Deborah Jacobvitz, Ashley M. Groh, Kristin Bernard, Chantal Cyr, Nancy L. Hazen, Sarah Foster, Elia Psouni, Philip A. Cowan, Carolyn Pape Cowan, Anne Rifkin-Graboi
ABSTRACT Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but misunderstandings are widespread and sometimes result in misapplications. The aim of this consensus statement is, therefore, to enhance understanding, counter misinformation, and steer family-court utilisation of attachment theory in a supportive, evidence-based direction, especially with regard
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Infant mental health home visiting: intervention dosage and therapist experience interact to support improvements in maternal reflective functioning Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2021-01-11 Ann M. Stacks, Jennifer M. Jester, Kristyn Wong, Alissa Huth-Bocks, Holly Brophy-Herb, Jamie Lawler, Jessica Riggs, Julie Ribaudo, Maria Muzik, Katherine L. Rosenblum
ABSTRACT This study examined changes in parental reflective functioning (PRF) among mothers enrolled in Infant Mental Health-Home Visiting (IMH-HV) and explored whether parental risk, treatment dosage or therapist experience predicted change in PRF. Participants included 75 mothers and their children who were enrolled in IMH-HV delivered by Community Mental Health therapists. Results indicated significant
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Attachment and task persistence: attachment orientations, perception of teacher’s responsiveness, and adolescents’ persistence in academic tasks Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2020-12-28 Anat Ben-Gal Dahan, Mario Mikulincer
ABSTRACT The goal of the two studies reported here was to examine the contribution of adolescents’ attachment orientations (anxiety, avoidance) and their perception of teacher’s responsiveness to persistence in academic tasks. In Study 1 (N = 160), we assessed self-reports of persistence in schoolwork. In Study 2 (N = 240), we manipulated the symbolic presence of participants’ teacher (teacher priming)
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Associations of maternal sensitivity and embodied mentalizing with infant-mother attachment security at one year in depressed and non-depressed dyads Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2020-12-21 Mette Skovgaard Væver, Katharina Cordes, Anne Christine Stuart, Anne Tharner, Dana Shai, Rose Spencer, Johanne Smith-Nielsen
ABSTRACT Parental Embodied Mentalizing (PEM) captures the parent’s capacity to extrapolate the child’s mental states from movement and respond on a nonverbal level. Little is known about PEM’s relation to other established measures of parent-child interactive behavior, such as maternal sensitivity and attachment. This is investigated in a sample of four months old infants and mothers with (n = 27)
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Verbal - prosodic association when narrating early caregiving experiences during the adult attachment interview: differences between secure and dismissing individuals Attachment & Human Development (IF 3.833) Pub Date : 2020-12-21 Maria Spinelli, Tiziana Aureli, Gabrielle Coppola, Silvia Ponzetti, Francesca Lionetti, Valentina Scialpi, Mirco Fasolo
ABSTRACT Previous studies reported an inconsistency between verbal extracts and emotional physiological activation in dismissing individuals when narrating their early caregiving experience at the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). This study aimed to explore this discrepancy by analyzing the degree of concordance between verbal content and prosodic characteristics, index of physiological activation