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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Attachment patterns in humans evolved to support different reproductive strategies. Secure attachment promotes cooperation and parenting, avoidant attachment supports opportunistic mating, and resistant attachment may foster indirect reproduction.

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Attachment securityFacultative responsesMatingParentingReproductive strategy

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary psychology
  • Developmental psychology
  • Behavioral ecology

Background:

  • Attachment theory describes enduring emotional bonds.
  • Three core patterns (secure, avoidant, resistant) are identified in infants and adults.
  • Evolutionary perspectives offer insights into the adaptive functions of these patterns.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze human attachment patterns through the lens of life history theory and behavioral ecology.
  • To review the mating and parenting correlates of secure, avoidant, and resistant attachment styles.
  • To propose evolutionary explanations for the adaptive significance of each attachment pattern.

Main Methods:

  • Review of existing literature on attachment theory.
  • Application of life history theory and behavioral ecology principles.
  • Analysis of data from the Strange Situation and Adult Attachment Interview.

Main Results:

  • Secure attachment is linked to mutually beneficial relationships and high-investment parenting.
  • Avoidant attachment correlates with opportunistic mating and lower parental investment.
  • Resistant attachment may be associated with "helper-at-the-nest" behaviors and indirect reproduction.

Conclusions:

  • Attachment patterns represent evolved strategies influencing social relationships and reproductive success.
  • Secure attachment facilitates long-term cooperation and parental investment.
  • Avoidant and resistant attachment patterns may reflect alternative strategies for maximizing reproductive fitness in different ecological contexts.