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Related Concept Videos

Attachment01:20

Attachment

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Attachment is vital for infant development, as warm social interactions support growth and well-being. In a classic 1958 study by Harry Harlow, the significance of warmth and comfort in forming attachments was examined. Harlow separated newborn monkeys from their mothers and provided two artificial "mothers": one made of cold wire and the other covered in soft cloth. Despite the wire mother offering food, the infant monkeys preferred the comfort of the cloth mother, demonstrating that...
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Parent-child interactions lay the foundation for how we understand relationships throughout life. These interactions are not uniform across families; instead, they are shaped by a range of environmental, emotional, and behavioral factors unique to each caregiver-child dynamic. Social psychologists study these early relationships to understand how patterns formed in infancy influence social functioning and interpersonal behavior in adulthood.Attachment Theory and Early Relational ModelsJohn...
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Jeffrey Simpson's attachment theory suggests that early caregiver relationships shape lasting patterns of behavior and emotional regulation, known as attachment styles. These patterns are organized along two key dimensions: self-esteem and interpersonal trust. The intersection of these dimensions produces four primary attachment styles that typically persist throughout life and significantly influence how individuals form and maintain relationships.Secure Attachment StyleIndividuals with a...
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Socio-emotional development in infancy is primarily shaped by early emotional responses and social connections, with temperament playing a central role. Temperament refers to the consistent patterns in an individual's emotional and behavioral responses, observable even in infancy. By examining temperament, researchers can better understand an infant's unique ways of interacting with the world, influencing subsequent personality and socio-emotional growth.
Primary Temperament Types
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Oct 13, 2025

Assessing the Coherence of Parents' Short Narratives Regarding their Child Using the Five-Minute Speech Sample Procedure
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Maternal secure base scripts predict child attachment security in an at-risk sample.

Alissa C Huth-Bocks1, Nabiha Zakir2, Katherine Guyon-Harris3

  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, UH Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, United States.

Infant Behavior & Development
|November 12, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Maternal secure base scripts, representing early experiences, predict child attachment security. The Attachment Script Assessment (ASA) effectively measures these scripts in at-risk populations.

Keywords:
AttachmentAttachment scriptLow-incomeSecure base script

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Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Attachment Theory
  • Clinical Psychology

Background:

  • Attachment scripts, derived from early experiences with caregivers, influence later life outcomes including caregiving and social-emotional adjustment.
  • Research has primarily focused on typical samples, with less understanding of secure base scripts in at-risk populations prone to attachment insecurity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the association between maternal secure base script representations and child attachment security within an at-risk sample.
  • To validate the Attachment Script Assessment (ASA) for use with at-risk caregivers.

Main Methods:

  • The study utilized the Attachment Script Assessment (ASA) to evaluate maternal secure base script representations in 100 mother-child pairs from a low-income, at-risk sample.
  • Maternal ASA scores were compared with normative data from middle-class samples to establish cross-sample comparability.
  • Child attachment security was assessed using the Attachment Q-Set (AQS) at ages 1 and 2 years, with dependency scores also analyzed for discriminant validity.

Main Results:

  • The ASA demonstrated comparable scores and statistical patterns across at-risk and middle-class samples, confirming its utility in diverse populations.
  • Maternal secure base script knowledge significantly predicted child attachment security at ages 1 and 2.
  • No significant relationship was found between maternal script knowledge and child dependency scores, supporting the discriminant validity of the ASA.

Conclusions:

  • The Attachment Script Assessment (ASA) is a viable and effective tool for assessing maternal attachment representations in at-risk populations.
  • Maternal secure base scripts are important predictors of child attachment security, even in samples facing psychosocial risks.
  • Findings highlight the potential of the ASA in identifying and supporting caregivers at risk for insecure attachment patterns with their children.