Adult attachment in a nationally representative sample.

K D Mickelson, R C Kessler, P R Shaver
Author Information
  1. K D Mickelson: Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. mickelson@hcp.med.harvard.edu

Abstract

The explosion of adult attachment research in the last decade has been limited by its reliance on college student and distressed samples. Using a large nationally representative sample of American adults, the authors examined the relation of sociodemographics, childhood adversity, parental representations, adult psychopathology, and personality traits to adult attachment in an effort to replicate previous findings and extend the theory. Distribution of adult attachment styles was similar to that in prior studies: 59% secure, 25% avoidant, and 11% anxious. Adult attachment was associated with several sociodemographic variables (e.g., income, age, race) not previously studied. Childhood adversities of an interpersonal nature were strongly related to insecure adult attachment. Various types of adult psychopathologies and personality traits were also strongly related to adult attachment. Implications for adult attachment theory and future research are discussed.

Grants

  1. MH46376/NIMH NIH HHS
  2. MH49098/NIMH NIH HHS
  3. T32-MH16806/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Anxiety, Separation
Child
Child of Impaired Parents
Defense Mechanisms
Female
Humans
Internal-External Control
Interpersonal Relations
Life Change Events
Male
Middle Aged
Object Attachment
Personality Development
Personality Inventory

Word Cloud

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