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Elia Psouni. Photo.

Elia Psouni

Professor

Elia Psouni. Photo.

The influence of attachment representations and co-parents’ scripted knowledge of attachment on fathers’ and mothers’ caregiving representations

Author

  • Elia Psouni

Summary, in English

Despite increased engagement of men in parenting, paternal caregiving representations have not been investigated, and potential gender differences in the links between parents’ attachment representations and their caregiving representations are unexplored. The present study investigated fathers’ and mothers’ (N = 77) representations of caregiving, and links to their own and their co-parents’ current mental representations of attachment. Parents were interviewed with the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and the Parental-Caregiving Attachment Interview (P-CAI), and co-parents’ attachment scripts were measured with the Attachment Script Assessment (ASA). Our results demonstrate several similarities between mothers’ and fathers’ caregiving representations, but gender differences emerged in probable rejecting and neglecting parental behaviors. For both fathers and mothers, we found systematic differences in caregiving-specific state of mind dimensions on the P-CAI, depending on the parent’s attachment classification on the AAI. Importantly, co-parent attachment security, but not parent gender was associated with the likelihood of being classified as autonomous with respect to caregiving.

Department/s

  • Department of Psychology

Publishing year

2019-03-01

Language

English

Pages

485-509

Publication/Series

Attachment and Human Development

Volume

21

Issue

5

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Topic

  • Applied Psychology (including Clinical Psychology, Psychotherapy)

Keywords

  • attachment
  • co-parent influences
  • Fathers
  • mental representations
  • parental caregiving

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1461-6734