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      The role of attachment in the early development of disruptive behavior problems

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          Abstract

          This paper presents information pertaining to attachment processes as risk factors in the development of disruptive behavior in young children. In recognition of the fact that attachment is not the only or necessarily most important risk factor in the prediction of behavior problems, attachment is considered in the context of other domains of variables, including child biologic factors, family ecology, and parental management and socialization practices. Within the attachment domain, we describe three complementary processes that may lead to disruptive behavior: the information-processing aspects of affective-cognitive structures, the function of observable attachment patterns, and the motivational consequences of attachment security. The indirect effects of maternal representations of attachment on child disruptive behavior are also considered. Examples of protypical risk factor combinations involving attachment and other domains are provided. The implications of the attachment perspective for research and clinical work with young disruptive children are discussed.

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          Most cited references78

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          The operated Markov´s chains in economy (discrete chains of Markov with the income)

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              Attachments beyond infancy.

              Attachment theory is extended to pertain to developmental changes in the nature of children's attachments to parents and surrogate figures during the years beyond infancy, and to the nature of other affectional bonds throughout the life cycle. Various types of affectional bonds are examined in terms of the behavioral systems characteristic of each and the ways in which these systems interact. Specifically, the following are discussed: (a) the caregiving system that underlies parents' bonds to their children, and a comparison of these bonds with children's attachments to their parents; (b) sexual pair-bonds and their basic components entailing the reproductive, attachment, and caregiving systems; (c) friendships both in childhood and adulthood, the behavioral systems underlying them, and under what circumstances they may become enduring bonds; and (d) kinship bonds (other than those linking parents and their children) and why they may be especially enduring.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Development and Psychopathology
                Dev Psychopathol
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0954-5794
                1469-2198
                1993
                October 31 2008
                1993
                : 5
                : 1-2
                : 191-213
                Article
                10.1017/S095457940000434X
                fba84c96-96bd-4a35-8702-211f11dbdb2c
                © 1993

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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