依恋理论与研究

P. Granqvist, R. Duschinsky
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引用次数: 0

摘要

依恋理论是由英国儿童精神病学家和精神分析学家约翰·鲍尔比(John Bowlby, 1907-1990)创立的。该理论建立在进化理论和行为学、控制论和认知科学以及精神分析对象关系理论的整合之上。该理论假定依恋行为系统是通过自然选择过程进化而来的。鲍比认为依恋系统是一种行为控制系统,它持续监控后代与照顾者的接近程度,这反过来又与保护后代免受危险有关,从而增加了人类和许多其他哺乳动物祖先环境中生存和繁殖的机会。依恋是一种物种范围内的现象,表明儿童与照顾者之间形成的牢固纽带,寻求保持亲近和交流,反对分离,并将照顾者作为安全的避风港,以寻求舒适和保护,并作为探索环境的安全基地。依恋需要时间、成熟和重复的互动序列来形成,通常从儿童一岁的下半年开始观察到。根据该理论,与照顾者的依恋相关经验以自我和他人的认知情感表征(内部工作模型[IWMs])的形式被内化,该模型组织儿童与照顾者有关的行为和情感表现。虽然具有延展性,但这种内在动机在时间和情境中表现出一定程度的连续性,并可能普遍化,影响个人在其他和后来的人际关系中的期望和行为倾向。玛丽·安斯沃思(Mary Ainsworth)及其同事率先提出,依恋的质量各不相同,很大程度上取决于照顾者的行为(例如,对孩子信号的反应和敏感性),而基因遗传性直接影响的证据有限。依恋的变化通常用两个维度来描述(安全-不安全,有组织-无组织),包括四个类别(安全,不安全-回避,不安全-抵抗-矛盾,无组织-无导向)。许多关于依恋的实证研究都集中在这些变化及其测量上。安斯沃斯和他的同事的奇怪情况程序(SSP),适用于10-18个月的孩子,经常被誉为“黄金标准”依恋测量工具。一致的研究表明,安全依恋(或相关因素),以对照顾者的可用性的信心为标志,通常是社会情感发展的保护因素。相反,不安全(回避型和抗拒型)依恋,其特征是对照顾者的可用性缺乏信心,通常是发展中的一个脆弱性因素。无组织的依恋,反映了儿童在照顾者在场时的困惑、冲突或忧虑的行为(在SSP中),是发展中的一个风险因素,最明显的是外化行为问题。值得注意的是,观察到的效应大小通常是小到中等的,关于联系机制和调节影响还有很多未知之处。虽然在儿童早期最容易观察到,但人类在整个生命周期中都会形成依恋。因此,许多研究也集中在成人(如配偶)依恋和从照顾者到子女的依恋的代际传递上。
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Attachment Theory and Research
Attachment theory was founded by John Bowlby (1907–1990), a British child psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. The theory builds on an integration of evolutionary theory and ethology, cybernetics and cognitive science, as well as psychoanalytic object relations theory. The theory postulates that an attachment behavioral system evolved via natural selection processes. Bowlby conceived of the attachment system as a behavioral control system that continuously monitors the offspring’s proximity to caregivers, which has in turn been associated with protection from dangers and thus increased chances of survival and reproduction in humans’ and many other mammals’ ancestral environments. Attachment is a species-wide phenomenon denoting the strong bonds that children form to their caregiver(s), seeking to maintain proximity and communication, protesting separations, and using the caregiver(s) as a safe haven to return to for comfort and protection and as a secure base to explore the environment from. Attachments take time, maturation, and repeated sequences of interaction to form and are typically observed from the second half of children’s first year of life onward. According to the theory, attachment-related experiences with the caregiver(s) become internalized in the form of cognitive-affective representations of self and others (internal working models [IWMs]) that organize the child’s behavior and displays of affect in relation to the caregiver(s). Although malleable, such IWMs display a certain measure of continuity across time and situations and may generalize to affect the individual’s expectancies and behavioral inclinations in other and later interpersonal relationships. As pioneered by Mary Ainsworth and colleagues, attachments vary in quality, largely depending on the caregiver’s behaviors (e.g., responsivity and sensitivity to the child’s signals), whereas evidence for a direct influence of genetic heritability is limited. Variations in attachment are typically described using two dimensions (secure–insecure, organized–disorganized) subsuming four categories (secure, insecure–avoidant, insecure-resistant–ambivalent, disorganized–disoriented). Much of the empirical research regarding attachment has focused on these variations and their measurement. Ainsworth and colleagues’ Strange Situation Procedure (SSP), applicable for children aged 10–18 months, is often heralded as the “gold standard” attachment measurement tool. The concerted body of research indicates that secure attachment (or associated factors), marked by confidence in the caregiver’s availability, is generally a protective factor in socioemotional development. In contrast, insecure (avoidant and resistant) attachment, characterized by lack of confidence in the caregiver’s availability, is generally a vulnerability factor in development. Disorganized attachment, reflecting confused, conflicted, or apprehensive child behaviors in the presence of the caregiver (in the SSP), is a risk factor in development, most notably for externalizing behavior problems. Notably, the effect sizes observed have typically been small to moderate, and much is unknown about linking mechanisms and moderating influences. Although most readily observed in early childhood, humans form attachments throughout the lifespan. Accordingly, much research has also focused on adult (e.g., spousal) attachment and the intergenerational transmission of attachment from caregivers to their children.
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