Results 211 to 220 of about 10,798 (258)
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INSECURE ATTACHMENTS AND THEIR INTERMINGLING TRANSFERENCES

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2017
There are least two different but interrelated motivational systems in human beings both of which begin in infancy: the attachment system and the separate, but interacting, psychodynamic system. Each of these systems is the basis of transference. A major focus of the paper is the affect-regulating feature of the attachment system.
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Strong but insecure: Examining the prevalence and correlates of insecure attachment bonds with attachment figures

Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 2012
This study examined whether people can be insecurely attached to figures who are actively sought out (and not just desired) to fulfill attachment functions and whether this has negative consequences for psychological well-being. A total of 122 participants rated 3–15 relational targets on measures including the extent to which the target fulfills ...
Marina Milyavskaya, John E. Lydon
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Insecure Attachment Behavior and Partner Violence: Incorporating Couple Perceptions of Insecure Attachment and Relational Aggression

Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2014
Intimate partner violence and insecure attachment are therapeutically relevant concepts when working with couples. The link between attachment and intimate partner violence has been examined in the literature, but an area of aggression that often goes unexamined is relational aggression, or using third parties as a means of being aggressive toward a ...
Megan, Oka   +3 more
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Insecure Parental Attachment and Permissiveness

The Family Journal, 2015
The research based on attachment has shown that patterns of relating with primary caregivers in childhood and adolescence influence a person into adulthood, especially with regard to interpersonal relationships, including sexual intimacy. This study utilized a measure of adult parental attachment style to determine whether the perception of one’s ...
Dempster, Darleen   +4 more
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Intervention in Transmission of Insecure Attachment: A Case Study

Psychological Reports, 1997
Several attachment-based intervention studies have been performed, with varying success. An important question is whether short-term interventions can be successful in promoting parental sensitivity and security of infant-parent attachment as well as in changing parental representations of attachment. We investigated this issue in an exploratory way in
Juffer, F.   +2 more
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Neglect and Attachment Insecurity

2018
The parent-infant relationship serves as a blueprint for future relationships with others and the world. From this relationship, the infant learns whether he can depend on others to meet his needs, whether he can communicate with others effectively, and whether it is safe to explore his world.
Nicole A. Sciarrino   +2 more
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The Insecure/Ambivalent Pattern of Attachment: Theory and Research

Child Development, 1994
Relatively little has been written about one group of infants identified with Ainsworth's "Strange Situation" assessment of infant-parent attachment, those classified insecure/ambivalent. Although virtually all samples contain some insecure/ambivalent infants, these infants are uncommon, comprising 7%-15% of most American samples.
J, Cassidy, L J, Berlin
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Feelings of insecurity: Review of attachment and eating disorders

European Eating Disorders Review, 2010
AbstractObjectiveAttachment theory has received increasing attention from clinicians and researchers in the field of eating disorders. This paper is an updated review on theoretical approaches in the field, and of studies employing the Adult Attachment Interview.MethodWe searched the major databases such as PsycInfo and Science Direct for empirical and
Henrik Daae, Zachrisson   +1 more
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Biobehavioral Organization in Securely and Insecurely Attached Infants

Child Development, 1993
Attachment research has shown the emergence of individual differences in the security of infant-mother attachment during the first year of life as well as their importance for later social-emotional development. A biobehavioral perspective may help settle disagreements about the validity and interpretation of 12-month-old infants' different behavioral ...
G, Spangler, K E, Grossmann
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Psychological Distress and Attachment Insecurity of Stalked Mothers

Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2018
There is a lack of research about intimate partner stalking when victim and stalker have children together. The aim of the current study was to provide knowledge about the mental health status and attachment patterns of mothers stalked by the father of one or more of their children.
Nele Marie Wolf   +2 more
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