Literature DB >> 12745827

A picture is worth a thousand words: children's representations of family as indicators of early attachment.

Sheri Madigan1, Michelle Ladd, Susan Goldberg.   

Abstract

To ascertain whether attachment representations at age 7 are related to early attachment behaviour, family drawings of 123 7-year-olds of known infant attachment status (25 avoidant, 80 secure, 18 resistant) were scored in four ways. Three of these were based in previous attachment research and one was based on a clinical method. The attachment-based coding schemes included specific markers for each attachment pattern (Kaplan & Main, 1985), global ratings (Fury, Carlson, & Sroufe, 1997) and efforts to classify each drawing as belonging to one of the three primary infant attachment groups (secure, avoidant, resistant). In the clinical scheme, children who had been resistant infants were distinguished from the others by use of overlapping and encapsulated figures. For the attachment based schemes, although individual markers were not successful in discriminating attachment groups, the more global approaches (aggregation of markers, global rating scales and judgments of attachment classification) succeeded in this task. In regression analyses controlling for concurrent child and parent measures, infant attachment did not make a significant contribution to predicting insecurity markers in drawings, although child current emotional functioning did. These findings linking attachment relationships with later representations of family relationships were in accord with the conception that avoidant attachment strategies de-emphasize intimate relationships, while resistant attachment strategies are preoccupied with close relationships. These links are most evident in global interpretive strategies rather than those that rely on specific markers.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12745827     DOI: 10.1080/1461673031000078652

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Attach Hum Dev        ISSN: 1461-6734


  5 in total

1.  Parenting and children's representations of family predict disruptive and callous-unemotional behaviors.

Authors:  Nicholas J Wagner; W Roger Mills-Koonce; Michael T Willoughby; Bharathi Zvara; Martha J Cox
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2015-05-25

2.  Child mental representations of attachment when mothers are traumatized: The relationship of family-drawings to story-stem completion.

Authors:  Daniel S Schechter; Annette Zygmunt; Kimberly A Trabka; Mark Davies; Elizabeth Colon; Ann Kolodji; Jaime E McCaw
Journal:  J Early Child Infant Psychol       Date:  2007

Review 3.  Family drawing for assessing attachment in children: Weaknesses and strengths.

Authors:  Cecilia Serena Pace; Stefania Muzi; Francesca Vizzino
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-09-12

4.  Attachment quality assessed from children's family drawings links to child conduct problems and callous-unemotional behaviors.

Authors:  Peter D Rehder; W Roger Mills-Koonce; Nicholas J Wagner; Bharathi Zvara; Michael T Willoughby
Journal:  Attach Hum Dev       Date:  2020-01-16

5.  Creating Art Together as a Transformative Process in Parent-Child Relations: The Therapeutic Aspects of the Joint Painting Procedure.

Authors:  Tami Gavron; Ofra Mayseless
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-11-13
  5 in total

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