Results 201 to 210 of about 32,556 (250)
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Attachment Behavior, Attachment Security, and Temperament during Infancy

Child Development, 1989
In summary reviews and empirical research, investigators have suggested that attachment classifications derived from the Ainsworth Strange Situation may reflect variations along dimensions of temperament as well as, or perhaps instead of, individual differences with respect to infant-mother attachments.
B E, Vaughn   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Attachment Security and Immunity in Healthy Women

Psychosomatic Medicine, 2007
Attachment security is associated with health and possibly autonomic and endocrine reactivity to stress, however the relationship between attachment style and immune function has not yet been investigated.A random sample of 61 female nurses provided a blood sample and completed the Perceived Stress Scale, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social ...
Angelo Picardi   +6 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Securing attachment: The shifting medicalisation of attachment and attachment disorders

Health, Risk & Society, 2010
This paper examines the medicalisation of attachment and attachment disorders. It argues that there was a shift in the form of medicalisation of attachment with significant implications for the regulation of the family. In the 1930s and 1940s, the medicalisation of attachment focused on the identification and treatment of attachment disorders in ...
openaire   +1 more source

Representations of attachment security, attachment avoidance, and gender in Ugandan children

Attachment & Human Development, 2020
Researchers returned to the home of Mary Ainsworth's original attachment study to explore the contributions of Ugandan children's representations of attachment interactions with their caregivers to their perceptions about gender. Researchers administered the Attachment Story-Completion Task (ASCT) and applied three attachment narrative coding systems ...
Valeda Dent, Geoff Goodman
openaire   +2 more sources

Instability of infant–parent attachment security.

Developmental Psychology, 1996
According to attachment theory, the infant during the second half of the first year of life develops an internal representation of the attachment relationship. Once formed, this representation is relatively stable (although still subject to modification based on subsequent experience) and guides the infant's behavior in new situations.
Jay Belsky   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Secure Attachments in Schools

2018
This concept paper proposes that educators of newcomer students are on the frontline of facilitating their optimal academic and social-emotional adaptation in a new land. Functioning as ambassadors for immigrant students learning a new language and culture, the school staff has the opportunity to assist the development of new secure attachment patterns
Alaisa Grudzinski   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Secure Email Attachment as a Service (SeaS)

2015 International Conference on Cloud Computing Research and Innovation (ICCCRI), 2015
In this paper we describe Secure Email Attachment as a Service (SeaS) which aims to provide a scalable and secure storage solutions for email attachments. Email remains the main communication platform for corporate users. It is a challenge for IT administrators to manage the ever increasing email storage requirements and the use of large email ...
Kheng Kok Mar, Chee Yong Law
openaire   +1 more source

Attachment security priming: a systematic review

Current Opinion in Psychology, 2019
Attachment security priming has been used to shed light on the cognitive processes related to attachment internal working models as well as the cognitive substrates of people's attachment-related affect and behavior. Security primes activate a sense of attachment security by making mental representations in one's memory more accessible and salient.
Omri, Gillath, Gery, Karantzas
openaire   +2 more sources

On solid ground: Secure attachment promotes place attachment

Journal of Environmental Psychology, 2020
Abstract The psychological determinants of place attachment have thus far been explored only to a limited extent. We propose that the bonds humans develop with other humans (attachment styles) are consequential to understand the bonds individuals develop with places and spaces (place attachment). We examined this hypothesis in four studies.
Claudia F. Nisa   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Attachment security, values, and prosocial attitudes

Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 2018
The objective of this study was to determine whether individuals with different attachment styles held different prosocial values and attitudes given their different models of self and of others. A sample of 717 university students completed the ECR‐S (Experiences in Close Relationships‐Spanish) and the PVQ (Portrait Values Questionnaire), and ...
Adelaida Monteoliva   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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