Sentences with phrase «more attachment research»

(For more attachment research click on 4 Ways AP can Reduce the Risk of SIDS)

Not exact matches

Bed bonding results in more independent children: Generally speaking, research around secure and insecure attachments show that children that are securely attached to their parents become independent more easily and those that are insecurely attached end up being anxious or overly dependent.
A large body of additional research suggests that a child's early attachment affects the quality of their adult relationships, and a recent longitudinal study of 81 men showed that those who grew up in warm, secure families were more likely to have secure attachments with romantic partners well into their 70s and 80s.
A growing body of research suggests that «more is better» — more than one secure attachment is helpful at all ages:
Research of more then 50 years shows that infants need to have secure attachments with their parents early in their lives.
However, in light of changing social realities in which mothers play an increasingly larger role in providing financially for their children, more research is being done on the role of fathers in attachment theory.
Do more research or ask your child's therapist if timeout would be a good discipline method for a child that is struggling with attachment issues.
If she is a hard sell, you can always tell mom that there is a growing wealth of research that suggests that kids raised using attachment parenting tenets are actually more independent and secure than their peers.
But while we wait for more research to clear these matters up, there are hints secure attachments are linked with higher intellectual achievement.
However, more research is needed to determine if problems in older children and adults are related to experiences of reactive attachment disorder in early childhood.
Various theories about reactive attachment disorder and its causes exist, and more research is needed to develop a better understanding and improve diagnosis and treatment options.
Recent long term research has shown that babies who went through CIO vs. those that didn't have no more or less attachment issues, trust issues, or other with parents or others at various stages, including at 6 years of age.
Attachment parenting, rather, has two key components well - represented in more than 60 years of research: sensitive response by a consistent caregiver.
More recent attachment theory is based on research into different styles of attachment in both children and adult romantic relationships.
(Dory's response): «That is because no attachment research that we're aware of has ever supported, or even so much as suggested, that single people as a whole are more secure than coupled people.
That is because no attachment research that we're aware of has ever supported, or even so much as suggested, that single people as a whole are more secure than coupled people.
Despite the plethora of respected research demonstrating the critical importance of early parent - child attachment, «Babywise» breezily dismisses this concept as little more than self - indulgent psychobabble.
These principles were created through the lens of attachment research and are designed to help parents become more attuned and connected to their children.
When he told me of this, I realized we needed to change the term to something more positive, so we came up with AP, since the Attachment Theory literature was so well researched and documented, by John Bowlby and others.»
Attachment Parenting is based on more than 60 years of solid, interdisciplinary research into parent - child relationships, from infant bonding and breastfeeding to nurturing touch and discipline.
Research has also shown that adults with an avoidant attachment style are more accepting and likely to engage in casual sex.
If you're curious about your attachment style, I encourage you to take a test online and / or do some more research.
More recent «speed - dating» research shows similar results; beauty mattered more than political attitudes, preferred hobbies, values / ethics, and even attachment security.3 Perhaps unsurprisingly, some results from OKCupid's data crunching show similar findiMore recent «speed - dating» research shows similar results; beauty mattered more than political attitudes, preferred hobbies, values / ethics, and even attachment security.3 Perhaps unsurprisingly, some results from OKCupid's data crunching show similar findimore than political attitudes, preferred hobbies, values / ethics, and even attachment security.3 Perhaps unsurprisingly, some results from OKCupid's data crunching show similar findings.
While previous research has only looked at a small number of personality traits, we also found that these athletic eHarmony users were more secure in their attachment styles, as well as valued monogamy and sexuality in relationships more.
Research has found that SEL techniques can improve behavior and academic performance, lessen absences and provide more attachment to school; it also improves behavior at home and in other settings.
Parents are more likely to use top tethers when installing a child restraint with a vehicle's LATCH system and attach the safety strap correctly if the attachment anchor is easy to find, a new study by the Institute and the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute (UMTRI) indicates.
Parents are more likely to use the top tether when installing a child restraint if the attachment anchor in the vehicle is easy to find, new research from IIHS and the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute inresearch from IIHS and the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute inResearch Institute indicates.
The Psychobiological Approach to Couple Therapy (PACT) draws on more than three decades of research on developmental neuroscience, attachment theory, and arousal regulation.
According to Stan Tatkin, who integrates attachment theory and recent neuroscience research, it is because at the beginning of our relationship we are fully attuned, curious to explore the other — whereas later on, we start to relate to each other on more of an automatic pilot state of mind:
The research tells us that children who have experienced adverse childhood experiences are more likely to also experience problems in the areas of attachment with caregivers, learning difficulties, lack of self control, and more.
Interestingly, recent research on physician - patient relationships has shown that insecure attachment attitudes of the patient are associated with a lack of compliance and low satisfaction with therapy.31, 32 Thus, mothers with insecure - anxious attachment attitudes may relapse more easily into former habits because of low satisfaction with therapy.
Further, there is a need for more research about the extent to which a focus on other factors associated with resilience may be compensatory in circumstances where attachment problems are intractable.
However nothing — absolutely nothing — in any research by Lamb or anyone else has found that infants «need» more than one caregiver, that they do better with more than one caregiver, that they need a father any more than they need a grandmother or older brother, or that any of these secondary attachments, to the extent they do form, are of equal importance to an infant's having a strong and healthy bond with its primary caregiver mother.
More recently, Sue Johnson, the founder of Emotionally Focused Therapy for Couples, added to Bowlby's research by adding that for this romantic attachment to feel secure, we need accessible, responsive, and engaged partners.
No research whatsoever has found that infants benefit when we increase their periods of separation from their primary attachment in order to allow them to spend more time with lesser attachment figures.
Bowlby studied infant - mother (or mother - substitute) attachments, and nothing in any subsequent research indicates that infants require more than one primary attachment, or that, if there are, collectively, important additional but lesser attachments, they even must be a «parent.»
«FuelEd's combination of research, understanding, application of skills, and personal development truly helped me to become more self - aware of my personal interactions both inside and outside of work so that I could better lead the people I work with toward successfully being secure attachment figures for our students.»
This is a tough one for the joint custody propagandists, because the research findings indicate that children do not need to spend more time with their fathers in order to maintain their levels of attachment with them.
There is, in other words, nothing in any research indicating, inter alia, that children need «fathers» if those relationships already have not been established, or anything in any research that suggests children benefit from anything more than to maintain those relationships they already have (if, presumably, these already are significant attachments — not all are, e.g. the daycare worker from last year.)
Whereas kissing is commonly perceived as a display of affection in romantic relationships, research highlights a far more nuanced explanation regarding the «function» of kissing within relationships.1 Some research suggests that kissing enables individuals to assess the quality of potential partners by putting individuals in close proximity, making it easier to examine features that are associated with mate value, such as breath and skin texture.2 Other research suggests that kissing elevates levels of arousal, which may lead to sexual intercourse.3 A third body of research suggests that kissing can influence feelings of attachment, alleviate stress, and increase relationship satisfaction.4 Given these varied explanations, the question remains: is there a single purpose for kissing or do all these explanations hold truth?
In fact, there is evidence from long - term relationships that among partners with insecure attachment, they were more likely to have complementary attachment styles.4 There is also research suggesting that when a relationship is likely, people prefer a partner who has some dissimilarity.5
The results of these research indicated that the subjects having safe attachment style have internal religious attitude, in spite that persons having external religious attitude are more unsafe attached persons and the main reason of this result is self - confidence and others confidence.
In addition, research on the impact of institutionalization (that is, placement in orphanages or large - group foster care settings) on children suggests that children with multiple caregivers are more likely to display insecure attachments and indiscriminate friendliness.20
Findings from the author's research with more thana 400 batterers are integrated with the literature on object relations, attachment, and psychological trauma to trace the development of the abusive personality from early childhood to adulthood.
On social - emotional measures, foster children in the NSCAW study tended to have more compromised functioning than would be expected from a high - risk sample.43 Moreover, as indicated in the previous section, research suggests that foster children are more likely than nonfoster care children to have insecure or disordered attachments, and the adverse long - term outcomes associated with such attachments.44 Many studies of foster children postulate that a majority have mental health difficulties.45 They have higher rates of depression, poorer social skills, lower adaptive functioning, and more externalizing behavioral problems, such as aggression and impulsivity.46 Additionally, research has documented high levels of mental health service utilization among foster children47 due to both greater mental health needs and greater access to services.
The main need that I see after completing this paper is that there is more research needed to address each aspect of divorce so that all theories can be compared, not just attachment theory.
Research indicates that depressed mothers, especially when their depression is chronic, are less sensitive with their infants and toddlers, play with and talk to their children less, and provide less supportive and age - appropriate limit setting and discipline than non-depressed mothers.4, 8,9 When mothers report more chronic depressive symptoms, their children are more likely to evidence insecure attachment relationships with them, show less advanced language and cognitive development, be less cooperative, and have more difficulty controlling anger and aggression.8, 9 Lower levels of maternal sensitivity and engagement explain some of these findings.
Finally, more research needs to be done to clearly delineate the difference between insecure attachments and disordered attachments.
Updated research on insecure adult attachment tells us these categories are more fluid than fixed.
Positive attachment styles may make for more nurturing relationships, according to research published in the «Journal of Social and Personal Relationships» in 2001 by researchers from The University of Utah.
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