Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 11 de 11
Filter
1.
Dev Psychol ; 57(4): 548-556, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34594056

ABSTRACT

The role of early child care experiences on the development of the mother-child attachment relationship has been studied extensively. However, no prospective studies of early child care have addressed how these experiences might be reflected in the content of attachment representations during adolescence and beyond. The goal of this study was to estimate relatively precise associations between child care quality, child care quantity, and type of care in the first 54 months of life and the content of adolescents' attachment representations around age 18 years (N = 857; 51% female; 78% White, non-Hispanic; M income-to-needs ratio = 4.13), leveraging data from the longitudinal NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECCYD). We identified a small positive association between the observed quality of early child care (but not quantity or type of care) and secure attachment states of mind as measured by the Adult Attachment Interview (but not the Attachment Script Assessment) at age 18 years that was robust to demographic covariates and observations of maternal and paternal sensitivity during childhood. We observed no significant interactions among child care variables. Associations between early child care experiences and indicators of adolescent attachment were likewise not moderated by maternal sensitivity from infancy to mid-adolescence or by maternal reports of child temperament in early childhood.


Subject(s)
Child Care , National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (U.S.) , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child Development , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Mother-Child Relations , Object Attachment , United States
2.
Dev Psychol ; 54(10): 1917-1927, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30234341

ABSTRACT

This study examined the predictive significance of maternal sensitivity in early childhood for electrophysiological responding to and cognitive appraisals of infant crying at midlife in a sample of 73 adults (age = 39 years; 43 females; 58 parents) from the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation. When listening to an infant crying, both parents and nonparents who had experienced higher levels of maternal sensitivity in early childhood (between 3 and 42 months of age) exhibited larger changes from rest toward greater relative left (vs. right) frontal EEG activation, reflecting an approach-oriented response to distress. Parents who had experienced greater maternal sensitivity in early childhood also made fewer negative causal attributions about the infant's crying; the association between sensitivity and attributions for infant crying was nonsignificant for nonparents. The current findings demonstrate that experiencing maternal sensitivity during the first 3½ years of life has long-term predictive significance for adults' processing of infant distress signals more than three decades later. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Brain/physiology , Crying , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Adult , Brain/growth & development , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Mothers/psychology , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology
3.
Dev Psychopathol ; 29(2): 337-345, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28401829

ABSTRACT

This paper reports the first large-sample investigation of the maltreatment-related correlates of low-income adolescents' narratives about their childhood experiences with primary caregivers, as assessed with a modified version of the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and based on official reports of abuse and neglect (maltreated n = 214, nonmaltreated n = 140; M age = 16.7 years). Drawing on factor-analytic and taxometric evidence indicating that AAI narratives vary along two state of mind (i.e., dismissing and preoccupied) and two inferred childhood experience (i.e., maternal and paternal) dimensions, here we demonstrate that the experience of maltreatment, particularly when chronic, is associated with increased risk for dismissing and preoccupied states of mind and more negative inferred childhood experiences. Although such maltreatment-related associations were generally not specific to any of the four AAI dimensions, the experience of physical and/or sexual abuse was uniquely associated with preoccupied states of mind and negative inferred paternal experiences even after controlling for the other AAI dimensions. More extensive paternal perpetration of maltreatment also was uniquely related to more negative inferred paternal experiences.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/psychology , Object Attachment , Poverty/psychology , Reactive Attachment Disorder/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child Abuse/diagnosis , Child Abuse, Sexual/diagnosis , Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Father-Child Relations , Female , Humans , Interview, Psychological , Male , Memory, Episodic , Mother-Child Relations , Reactive Attachment Disorder/diagnosis , Statistics as Topic
4.
Attach Hum Dev ; 18(4): 317-36, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27032953

ABSTRACT

Although attachment theory claims that early attachment representations reflecting the quality of the child's "lived experiences" are maintained across developmental transitions, evidence that has emerged over the last decade suggests that the association between early relationship quality and adolescents' attachment representations is fairly modest in magnitude. We used aspects of parenting beyond sensitivity over childhood and adolescence and early security to predict adolescents' scripted attachment representations. At age 18 years, 673 participants from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development completed the Attachment Script Assessment from which we derived an assessment of secure base script knowledge. Measures of secure base support from childhood through age 15 years (e.g., parental monitoring of child activity, father presence in the home) were selected as predictors and accounted for an additional 8% of the variance in secure base script knowledge scores above and beyond direct observations of sensitivity and early attachment status alone, suggesting that adolescents' scripted attachment representations reflect multiple domains of parenting. Cognitive and demographic variables also significantly increased predicted variance in secure base script knowledge by 2% each.


Subject(s)
Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Object Attachment , Parenting/psychology , Adolescent , Child , Cognition , Environment , Female , Humans , Male , Paternal Deprivation , Problem Solving , Psychological Theory , Regression Analysis , Socioeconomic Factors
5.
Can J Behav Sci ; 48(1): 78-88, 2016 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27065477

ABSTRACT

An emerging literature suggests that variation in Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; George, Kaplan, & Main, 1985) states of mind about childhood experiences with primary caregivers is reflected in specific linguistic features captured by the Linguistic Inquiry Word Count automated text analysis program (LIWC; Pennebaker, Booth, & Francis, 2007). The current report addressed limitations of prior studies in this literature by using two large AAI corpora (Ns = 826 and 857) and a broader range of linguistic variables, as well as examining associations of LIWC-derived AAI dimensions with key developmental antecedents. First, regression analyses revealed that dismissing states of mind were associated with transcripts that were more truncated and deemphasized discussion of the attachment relationship whereas preoccupied states of mind were associated with longer, more conflicted, and angry narratives. Second, in aggregate, LIWC variables accounted for over a third of the variation in AAI dismissing and preoccupied states of mind, with regression weights cross-validating across samples. Third, LIWC-derived dismissing and preoccupied state of mind dimensions were associated with direct observations of maternal and paternal sensitivity as well as infant attachment security in childhood, replicating the pattern of results reported in Haydon, Roisman, Owen, Booth-LaForce, and Cox (2014) using coder-derived dismissing and preoccupation scores in the same sample.

6.
Attach Hum Dev ; 17(4): 414-28, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26213155

ABSTRACT

This study examined the intergenerational continuities and changes in infant attachment patterns within a higher-risk longitudinal sample of 55 female participants born into poverty. Infant attachment was assessed using the Strange Situation when participants were 12 and 18 months as well as several decades later with participants' children. Paralleling earlier findings from this sample on the stability of attachment patterns from infancy to young adulthood, results provided evidence for intergenerational continuities in attachment disorganization but not security. Children of adults with histories of infant attachment disorganization were at an increased risk of forming disorganized attachments. Although changes in infant attachment patterns across the two generations were not correlated with individuals' caregiving experiences or interpersonal stresses and supports during childhood and adolescence, higher quality social support during adulthood was associated with intergenerational changes from insecure to secure infant-caregiver attachment relationships.


Subject(s)
Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Object Attachment , Poverty , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Prospective Studies , Social Support , Socioeconomic Factors , Young Adult
7.
Dev Psychol ; 51(6): 823-30, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25775111

ABSTRACT

There is increasing evidence that attachment representations abstracted from childhood experiences with primary caregivers are organized as a cognitive script describing secure base use and support (i.e., the secure base script). To date, however, the latent structure of secure base script knowledge has gone unexamined-this despite that such basic information about the factor structure and distributional properties of these individual differences has important conceptual implications for our understanding of how representations of early experience are organized and generalized, as well as methodological significance in relation to maximizing statistical power and precision. In this study, we report factor and taxometric analyses that examined the latent structure of secure base script knowledge in 2 large samples. Results suggested that variation in secure base script knowledge-as measured by both the adolescent (N = 674) and adult (N = 714) versions of the Attachment Script Assessment-is generalized across relationships and continuously distributed.


Subject(s)
Interpersonal Relations , Object Attachment , Adolescent , Adult , Caregivers/psychology , Cognition , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
8.
Psychol Sci ; 26(3): 348-53, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25576344

ABSTRACT

In this study, we drew on prospective, longitudinal data to investigate the long-term predictive significance of the quality of early parent-child relationship experiences for adults' sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity during conflict discussions with their romantic partners. Maternal sensitivity was repeatedly assessed across childhood via direct observations of mother-child interactions. When the children in the study became adults (34-37 years old), electrodermal activity-an index of SNS arousal and a psychophysiological marker of behavioral inhibition-was recorded for 37 participants while at rest and while they attempted to resolve conflicts in their romantic relationships. Individuals who had experienced less sensitive maternal caregiving during childhood had greater increases in electrodermal activity during conflict discussions with their adult partners, relative to resting conditions. This longitudinal association was not accounted for by observed or self-reported romantic-relationship quality, gender, ethnicity, or early socioeconomic factors.


Subject(s)
Family Conflict/psychology , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Prospective Studies
9.
Dev Psychol ; 50(11): 2526-2538, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25264703

ABSTRACT

Based on a subsample (N = 673) of the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECCYD) cohort, this article reports data from a follow-up assessment at age 18 years on the antecedents of secure base script knowledge, as reflected in the ability to generate narratives in which attachment-related difficulties are recognized, competent help is provided, and the problem is resolved. Secure base script knowledge was (a) modestly to moderately correlated with more well-established assessments of adult attachment, (b) associated with mother-child attachment in the first 3 years of life and with observations of maternal and paternal sensitivity from childhood to adolescence, and (c) partially accounted for associations previously documented in the SECCYD cohort between early caregiving experiences and Adult Attachment Interview states of mind (Booth-LaForce & Roisman, 2014) as well as self-reported attachment styles (Fraley, Roisman, Booth-LaForce, Cox, & Holland, 2013). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Family Relations , Interpersonal Relations , Adolescent , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Narration , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
Attach Hum Dev ; 16(2): 103-36, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24547936

ABSTRACT

This meta-analytic review examines the association between attachment during the early life course and social competence with peers during childhood, and compares the strength of this association with those for externalizing and internalizing symptomatology. Based on 80 independent samples (N = 4441), the association between security and peer competence was significant (d = 0.39, CI 0.32; 0.47) and not moderated by the age at which peer competence was assessed. Avoidance (d = 0.17, CI 0.05; 0.30), resistance (d = 0.29, CI 0.09; 0.48), and disorganization (d = 0.25, CI 0.10; 0.40) were significantly associated with lower peer competence. Attachment security was significantly more strongly associated with peer competence than internalizing (but not externalizing) symptomatology. Discussion focuses on the significance of early attachment for the development of peer competence versus externalizing and internalizing psychopathology.


Subject(s)
Father-Child Relations , Internal-External Control , Mother-Child Relations , Object Attachment , Peer Group , Social Adjustment , Anomie , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Personality Disorders/etiology , Personality Disorders/psychology , Reactive Attachment Disorder/etiology , Reactive Attachment Disorder/psychology
11.
Psychol Sci ; 22(3): 376-83, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21245491

ABSTRACT

This study adopted a developmental perspective on recovery from conflict in romantic relationships. Participants were 73 young adults (target participants), studied since birth, and their romantic partners. A novel observational coding scheme was used to evaluate each participant's degree of conflict recovery, operationalized as the extent to which the participant disengaged from conflict during a 4-min "cool-down" task immediately following a 10-min conflict discussion. Conflict recovery was systematically associated with developmental and dyadic processes. Targets who were rated as securely attached more times in infancy recovered from conflict better, as did their romantic partners. Concurrently, having a romantic partner who displayed better recovery predicted more positive relationship emotions and greater relationship satisfaction. Prospectively, target participants' early attachment security and their partners' degree of conflict recovery interacted to predict relationship stability 2 years later, such that having a partner who recovered from conflict better buffered targets with insecure histories.


Subject(s)
Love , Negotiating/psychology , Personality Development , Adaptation, Psychological , Emotions , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Individuality , Infant , Male , Object Attachment , Parent-Child Relations , Personal Satisfaction , Social Support , Transfer, Psychology , Young Adult
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...