Publication | Closed Access
Attachment between infants and mothers in China
27
Citations
30
References
2015
Year
Family MedicineParental CareSocial PsychologyEducationFamily PlanningPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyChild CareEarly Childhood ExperienceChild AssessmentFamily RelationshipsChild PsychologyEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal HealthFirst DistributionCultural SensitivityAttachment TheoryChild DevelopmentGlobal NormsCross-cultural AssessmentCross-cultural PerspectivePediatricsParentingDevelopmental ScienceFamily PsychologyCaregiver StudiesUs NormsCultural Psychology
The first distribution of Chinese infant–mother ( n = 61) attachment classifications categorised by trained and reliability-tested coders is reported with statistical comparisons to US norms and previous Chinese distributions. Three-way distribution was 15% insecure-avoidant, 62% secure, 13% insecure-resistant, and 4-way distribution was 13% insecure-avoidant, 58% secure, 16% insecure-resistant,13% disorganised. These findings support the hypotheses that: (1) consistent with global norms the majority of infants will show secure attachments to mother; (2) insecure-resistant attachments will be greater than insecure-avoidant attachments in this interdependent cultural setting; and (3) disorganised attachments will be comparable to Western norms. Pooled samples from previously reported Chinese samples demonstrate deviations from US norms on all categories including relatively low proportions of avoidant and disorganised classifications, especially among samples from the South. Culture-specific childrearing practices and the role of training and reliability-testing for coders are suggested as possible contributors to these differences.
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