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Attachment in children

About: Attachment in children is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 81 publications have been published within this topic receiving 28615 citations.


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01 Jan 1969

18,243 citations

DatasetDOI

2,336 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis included 66 studies (N = 4,176) on parental antecedents of attachment security and the question was whether maternal sensitivity is associated with infant attachment security, and what the strength of this relation is.
Abstract: This meta-analysis included 66 studies (N = 4,176) on parental antecedents of attachment security. The question addressed was whether maternal sensitivity is associated with infant attachment security, and what the strength of this relation is. It was hypothesized that studies more similar to Ainsworth's Baltimore study (Ainsworth, Blehar, Waters, & Wall, 1978) would show stronger associations than studies diverging from this pioneering study. To create conceptually homogeneous sets of studies, experts divided the studies into 9 groups with similar constructs and measures of parenting. For each domain, a meta-analysis was performed to describe the central tendency, variability, and relevant moderators. After correction for attenuation, the 21 studies (N = 1,099) in which the Strange Situation procedure in nonclinical samples was used, as well as preceding or concurrent observational sensitivity measures, showed a combined effect size of r(1,097) = .24. According to Cohen's (1988) conventional criteria, the association is moderately strong. It is concluded that in normal settings sensitivity is an important but not exclusive condition of attachment security. Several other dimensions of parenting are identified as playing an equally important role. In attachment theory, a move to the contextual level is required to interpret the complex transactions between context and sensitivity in less stable and more stressful settings, and to pay more attention to nonshared environmental influences.

2,219 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The current series of meta-analyses have established the reliability and discriminant validity of disorganized infant attachment and the search for the mechanisms leading to disorganization has just started.
Abstract: During the past 10 years nearly 80 studies on disorganized attachment involving more than 6,000 infant-parent dyads have been carried out. The current series of meta-analyses have established the reliability and discriminant validity of disorganized infant attachment. Although disorganized attachment behavior is necessarily difficult to observe and often subtle, many researchers have managed to become reliable coders. Furthermore, disorganized attachment shows modest short- and long-term stability, in particular in middle class environments, and it is not just a concomitant of constitutional, temperamental, or physical child problems. The predictive validity of disorganized attachment is established in terms of problematic stress management, the elevated risk of externalizing problem behavior, and even the tendency of disorganized infants to show dissociative behavior later in life. In normal, middle class families, about 15% of the infants develop disorganized attachment behavior. In other social contexts and in clinical groups this percentage may become twice or even three times higher (e.g., in the case of maltreatment). Although the importance of disorganized attachment for developmental psychopathology is evident, the search for the mechanisms leading to disorganization has just started. Frightening parental behavior may play an important role but it does not seem to be the only causal factor involved in the emergence of disorganized attachment.

1,512 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors adapted observational techniques employed by behavioral biologists and learned to examine infant behavior in detail and in context, and found that this behavior is complexly organized, goalcorrected, and sensitive to environmental input.
Abstract: At times, it seems as if attachment research could fall victim to its own success In the span of barely 15 years, we have come to accept Freud's view that attachment in infancy constitutes a genuine love relationship We have recognized that this relationship is closely tracked by patterns of behavior toward caregivers and that this behavior is complexly organized, goalcorrected, and sensitive to environmental input We have also adapted observational techniques employed by behavioral biologists and learned to examine infant behavior in detail and in context As a result we have learned

1,054 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20212
20208
20195
20186
20177
20163