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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This study examined the antecedents of preschool age children’s mental
representations of attachment, assessed using the Attachment Story Completion
Task (ASCT). Antecedent predictors were maternal attachment scripts, assessed
using the Attachment Script Assessment (ASA), and the child’s secure base
behaviors, assessed using the Attachment Q-Set (AQS). Participants were 121
mothers and their preschool children assessed in three samples (Portuguese
sample, n ¼ 31; US Midwestern sample, n ¼ 38; US Southeastern sample,
n ¼ 52). AQS and ASA assessments were completed approximately 1.5 years
before the ASCT data were collected. No cross-sample contrasts for the
attachment variables were significant. Correlations and structural equation
modeling (SEM) indicated that the three attachment measures were significantly
associated and that both maternal secure base script knowledge and children’s
secure base behaviors (AQS) were uniquely and significantly associated with
children’s mental representations of attachment (ASCT). A test of the indirect
effect between maternal scripts and child representations through children’s
secure base behaviors was not significant.
Description
Keywords
Attachment Mental representations Secure base behaviors Culture
Citation
Attachment & Human Development, 13(5), 489-502