Publication | Closed Access
Attachment security and temperament in infancy and early childhood: Some conceptual clarifications.
103
Citations
39
References
1992
Year
Parental CareEducationPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyIntimate RelationshipHuman DevelopmentConceptual ClarificationsSocial-emotional DevelopmentPersonality DevelopmentPersonal RelationshipChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryEarly Childhood DevelopmentAttachment Security CorrelationsAttachment TheoryAttachment SecurityChild DevelopmentEmotional ReactivityEmotional DevelopmentMedicine
Relations between attachment security and temperament were studied in 6 samples. Ages at temperament assessments ranged from 5 to 42 months and attachment security was assessed between 12 and 45 months. Attachment security was assessed using the Waters and Deane Attachment Behavior Q-set. Principal component analyses were used with the temperament data, and scores for the first component (Emotional Reactivity) served as correlates of attachment security. Analyses revealed significant associations between temperament and attachment at all ages when mothers completed both instruments, and when Q-sorts were independent from maternal temperament perceptions, temperament and attachment security correlations reached significance for older children
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