It explains attachment theory through the lens of Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy.
Not exact matches
Expert Aimee Wheeler,
explains the science behind the
attachment theory and how
attachment early on in life will biologically create pathways that will allow for healthy relationships and interactions later on.
A clinician - scientist, he has elaborated modern
attachment theory over the last three decades by
explaining how the
attachment relationship is important to the child's developing brain and body.
Watch and learn as
attachment theory is
explained in regards to the long terms effects on a child.
Therapist Julie Wright, MFT
explains how fostering a secure
attachment with your child is about «being» rather than «doing» through the
attachment parenting
theory.
The answer can partially be found within something called «
Attachment Theory», which helps to
explain how an enduring emotional bond is formed between an infant and her primary caregiver.
The results might raise eyebrows, such as her use of John Bowlby's infant
attachment theory to
explain the behaviour of grizzly bears, or the observation that white sharks are «individuals who are conventional with narrow interests».
Anxious
attachment style also
explained belief in conspiracy
theories whilst taking into account other important factors such as general feelings of mistrust, age, education and religiosity.
In Attached, Levine and Heller use the science of
attachment theory to
explain these behaviors, helping new couples (and those on the dating scene) understand what they need from a romantic partnership.
By
explaining how
attachment theory related to the unstable and violent actions of men, Nora presented a case for fostering less insecurity and vulnerability in society by nurturing secure emotional bonds from a young age.
In Attached, Levine and Heller use the science of
attachment theory to
explain these behaviours, helping new couples (and those on the dating scene) understand what they need from a romantic partnership.
Attachment theory also explains unhealthy development, as insecurely attached mourn lost attachments (think about someone who is legally married but has been emotionally divorced for a long time), engage in inconsistent attachment behaviors (think attack and defend, or pursue and distance patterns), suffer ongoing attachment injury (ongoing negative sentiment override), may experience attachment panic (maintain physical and emotional control over their partners), or maintain multiple attachments for fear of losing or being swallowed by one (who have
Attachment theory also
explains unhealthy development, as insecurely attached mourn lost
attachments (think about someone who is legally married but has been emotionally divorced for a long time), engage in inconsistent
attachment behaviors (think attack and defend, or pursue and distance patterns), suffer ongoing attachment injury (ongoing negative sentiment override), may experience attachment panic (maintain physical and emotional control over their partners), or maintain multiple attachments for fear of losing or being swallowed by one (who have
attachment behaviors (think attack and defend, or pursue and distance patterns), suffer ongoing
attachment injury (ongoing negative sentiment override), may experience attachment panic (maintain physical and emotional control over their partners), or maintain multiple attachments for fear of losing or being swallowed by one (who have
attachment injury (ongoing negative sentiment override), may experience
attachment panic (maintain physical and emotional control over their partners), or maintain multiple attachments for fear of losing or being swallowed by one (who have
attachment panic (maintain physical and emotional control over their partners), or maintain multiple
attachments for fear of losing or being swallowed by one (who have affairs).
In Attached, Levine and Heller use the science of
attachment theory to
explain these behaviours, helping new couples (and those on the dating scene) understand what they need from a romantic partnership.
Attachment theory also
explains healthy development, as securely attached partners are open to reframes and different points of view, and able to tolerate ambiguity, to meta - communicate, to handle learning unflattering things about themselves, to feel and express regret for their past failures recognizing and meeting their partner's needs, and to see their understanding of the world and others as working models.
According to John Bowlby's
theory of
attachment, however, it was
explained that
attachment security is something that is developed through nurture.
It
explains the persistence into adult life of early
attachment styles, and how challenging the establishment of a secure
attachment may be if either infant or mother have an impaired capacity for «
theory of mind» relating.
The
theories behind Insecure
Attachment are
explained and practised and the happy children who emerge by the end of a program of family therapy sessions are barely recognizable from the desperately unhappy children in the earliest videos.»
Many psychologists
explain this using «
Attachment theory,» which is now widely recognized as a
theory of love.
ATTACHMENT theory, as formulated by John Bowlby 1969, Bowlby 1973, Bowlby 1980, represents a body of work that attempts to
explain the pervasiveness of human social bonds and reactions to their disruptions.
Attachment theory provides a framework for
explaining how dysfunctional interpersonal style arising from early childhood perpetuates vulnerability to affective disorders.
At NCCT, Kerry,
explains, she and her team use «evidence - informed» therapy, which draws on some of the leading models in the field of «relationship distress, as well as
attachment theory and the psychobiology of relationships.»
I saw a symposium of researchers who used
attachment theory to
explain differences in sexual behavior.
Bowlby's
attachment theory is a truly environmental
theory as it has
explained individual differences in
attachment patterns (
attachment types) by individual variations in caregivers» behaviour.
Perhaps I should have included a discussion of Bowlby and Ainsworth's
attachment theory explaining the development of security from infancy to adulthood and how it affects personality.
John Bowlby, in his study of
attachment in infancy and toddlerhood, devised the ethological
theory, which
explained the sequence of events in
attachment development.
It is clear that behavioral mechanisms simply can not be used adequately to
explain and account for the most basic findings that support
attachment theory.
In order to
explain further, I'll need to give you a brief synopsis of Emotionally - Focused Couples Therapy
Theory, or EFTCT (based in
Attachment Theory by John Bowlby).
A clinician - scientist, he has elaborated modern
attachment theory over the last three decades by
explaining how the
attachment relationship is important to the child's developing brain and body.
Explain and apply the fundamentals of a contextual and evolutionary
theory of compassion focused emotion regulation,
attachment, and cognition
This suggests that there are other reasons which may better
explain why children develop different
attachment types and that the maternal sensitivity
theory places too much emphasis on the mother.
«
Attachment theory is essentially a
theory of regulation,»
explains Allan Schore, a developmental neuroscientist in the Department of Psychiatry at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine.
These two volumes are a collection of papers that bring together evidence from brain research and
attachment theory to
explain the very solid basis for mind change and therefore brain development that results from caregiving relationships.
Workshop facilitators give engaging presentations using pictures, music, and videos from both science and popular culture to
explain a few core concepts of
attachment theory — the science of adult love.
This text excels in its discussion of how
attachment theory informs the therapeutic alliance (what some would call «professional use of self») and in
explaining how and why therapy works.
They extended the
theory to
explain that
attachment is a two way process that the caregiver must also learn, and this occurs through negative reinforcement when the caregiver feels pleasure because the infant is no longer distressed.
Attachment theory explains how the parent - child relationship emerges and influences subsequent development.
Attachment theory is a composite psychosocial development
theory that
explains the formation of interpersonal relationships patterns.
Attachment theory is the way the transmission is
explained, focusing on the child's need to share his or her parents» experiences, even bad ones.
Bowlby's
theory explains how
attachment behaviors are activated when an individual feels fear, fatigue, or pain.
Originally developed in the middle of the 20th century from an evolutionary framework,
attachment theory attempts to
explain close relationship behavior across the lifespan (Bowlby, 1969, 1982).
Attachment theory has been applied to adult love relationships to provide us with a map that helps to
explain how we love and connect in marriage and other intimate relationships.
The concept of suppressed rage has, nevertheless, continued to be a central focus
explaining the children's behavior (Cline, 1992 [7]-RRB-» and that «there are many ways in which holding therapy /
attachment therapy contradicts Bowlby's
attachment theory, not least
attachment theory's fundamental and evidence - based statement that security is promoted by sensitivity.
This book applies
attachment theory to group psychotherapy,
explaining how group therapists can effectively work with members with different
attachment styles.
However, the model might also be fruitful to
explain mediational factors in the
attachment relationships between romantic partners (e.g., shared experiences, association value, perceptions, knowledge, and subjective
theories of relationships).
An integrative review of three
theories that
explain why some individuals engage in persistent pursuit — coercive control
theory, relational goal pursuit, and
attachment theory — is presented.
So here are the 10 central tenants of
attachment theory as described by Susan Johnson in her book Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy with Trauma Survivors (some of this is copied directly from her book and some is my own interpretation in order to best
explain attachment):
Attachment theory developed by (BowlbyI980a) explained early childhood development and lays tremendous importance that a human infant has a biological need for protective attachment figure for survival and absence of such a figure can cause psychological difficulties in the child's emotion
Attachment theory developed by (BowlbyI980a)
explained early childhood development and lays tremendous importance that a human infant has a biological need for protective
attachment figure for survival and absence of such a figure can cause psychological difficulties in the child's emotion
attachment figure for survival and absence of such a figure can cause psychological difficulties in the child's emotional growth.
Therefore, the current results support the previously postulated hypothesis [111] that
attachment theory could be extended to a biopsychosocial model of health that in turn, can
explain some aspects of vulnerability to ill - health and gives rise to a range of hypotheses concerning behavior, cognition and affect.
Attachment theory has been applied to understand psychological disorders, such as depression, and can
explain individual differences in responses to rejection.
This paper presents an integration of aspects of
attachment theory and contemporary interpersonal
theory which
explains how interpersonal interactions contribute to a clinical understanding of depression and its treatment through IPT.