Notably, we recently reported neural data suggesting that
insecure attachment strategies lead children to respond to the Cyberball paradigm with more excessive and enduring negative expectations regarding re-inclusion than securely attached children (White et al., 2012, 2013).
Most men with
insecure attachment strategies disclosed during treatment that they had experienced trauma in childhood, specifically trauma physical, sexual, and psychological abuse or neglect, abandonment, or loss of the caregivers experienced by the child.
This may in the end lead to a breakdown of organized attachment strategies or impede children's capacity to even develop an organized
insecure attachment strategy.
Not exact matches
The effectiveness of these intervention
strategies was demonstrated by a study in the Netherlands in which 100 6 - month - old infants who displayed high levels of irritability shortly after birth were deemed to be at risk of developing
insecure attachment.
Adult
attachment and dating
strategies: How do
insecure people attract mates?
(PDF - 564 KB) Center on the Social and Emotional Foundations for Early Learning (2011) Explains
attachment and its importance, describes the characteristics of children with secure or
insecure attachment relationships, notes cultural differences in
attachment, and provides
strategies teachers and caregivers can use to promote children's secure
attachment.
This 12 hour - 4 day virtual workshop provides theoretical and practical
strategies to assist clinicians working with children with severe dysregulation of the affective system such as: Children exhibiting
insecure patterns of
attachment, complex PTSD and dissociative symptoms.
In addition, clinicians will learn advanced
strategies to work with dissociative children and children with
insecure patterns of
attachment throughout the eight phases of EMDR therapy.
The other two
insecure attachment styles did provide the child with a coping
strategy: • Avoidant
attachment was characterized by the child's emotional disengagement - a defensive
strategy to the mother's lack of response; «Why bother reaching out when nothing happens»!
Insecure attachments are typically characterized by resistance to caregiver comfort or a constant need for it, without ever being soothed [45], while disorganized
attachments are characterized by their lack of consistent (or organized)
strategy, where a child will both seek and fear their caregiver [47, 66].
[jounal] Ein - Dor, T. / 2011 /
Attachment insecurities and the processing of threat - related information: Studying the schemas involved in
insecure people's coping
strategies / Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 28: 78 ~ 93
These various contradictory and un-integrated behaviours are thought to indicate the infant's inability to organize a coherent
strategy for eliciting comfort from the caregiver and are differentially associated with increased release of stress hormones.1, 2 Disorganized
attachment behaviours may occur in combination with other
insecure behaviours that are part of an avoidant or ambivalent
attachment strategy.
This advanced workshop provides theoretical and practical
strategies to assist clinicians working with children with severe dysregulation of the affective system such as: Children exhibiting
insecure patterns of
attachment, complex PTSD and dissociative symptoms.
Meta - analytic evidence [59] rather suggests, that the association between
insecure attachment and internalizing
strategies is rather small, and the effect solely explained by avoidant (i.e. dismissing)
attachment.