attachment in adulthood simpson, j. s., & rholes, w. s. (1998). attachment in adulthood. in j....
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Attachment in Adulthood
Simpson, J. S., & Rholes, W. S. (1998). Attachment in adulthood. In J. A. Simpson & W. S. Rholes (Eds.), Attachment theory and close relationships (pp. 3-21). New York: Guilford Press.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Two Traditions
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Two Traditions (cont.)
Attachment in Nuclear Families Measurement relies primarily on attachment
interviews to assess adults’ memories of childhood experiences with their parents.
Primary interview protocol: Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) developed by George, Kaplan, & Main.
Most often used to investigate influence of adult attachment style on attachment style of child, parenting style, or other aspects of the parent-child relationship.
Attachment to Contemporary Peers and/or Romantic Partners Assumption: “romantic love is fundamentally
an attachment process through which affectional bonds are formed” (Simpson & Rholes, 1998, p. 6).
Measurement relies primarily on self-report instruments to assess perception of current relationship experiences with peers or romantic partners.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Two Traditions (cont.)
Research suggests that there is limited correspondence between AAI and measures of adult romantic attachment. Simpson & Rholes suggest that lack of
correspondence should not be surprising because they measure different dimensions of attachment: “the two traditions should provide unique information about an individual’s attachment history in different kinds of relationships experienced at different points in time” (1998, p. 6; emphasis added).
Important distinction to amplify: the AAI measures perception of relationship with parents to predict caregiving while measures or peer/romantic attachment assess contemporary relationships with other adults.
Methodological issue: different forms of measurement (e.g., self-report versus observational) do not often correspond because they seem to measure different perceptions (e.g., insider versus outsider views).
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Advances in Adults Attachment
The Nuclear Family Tradition The Peer/Romantic Partner Tradition
Identification of two forms of avoidant attachment in adult romantic relationships was a divergence from the other tradition: Secure: positive view of self and others.Preoccupied: negative self views and
positive (yet apprehensive) views of others. Fearful-avoidant: negative views of self and
others.Dismissing-avoidant: positive self views but
negative views of others. Conceptualization of attachment as a
continuous rather than a categorical variable.
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