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Treatment of anxious attachment in infancy and early childhood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Patricia M. Crittenden*
Affiliation:
University of Miami
*
Address reprint requests to: Patricia M. Crittenden, Ph.D., 9481 SW 147 Street, Miami, FL 33176.

Abstract

This paper integrates the work of Stern on affect regulation, Ainsworth on quality of attachment, Piaget on cognitive development, Tulving on memory systems, and Bowlby on internal representational models around the issue of promoting secure attachment. It is proposed that procedural models of the self and attachment figures develop in infancy, are maintained throughout the life span, and are accessed preconsciously to regulate everyday behavior. In the preoperational period, semantic models of generalizations regarding the self and others are constructed (often from parents' words), encoded, and accessed linguistically when the expectations implied by procedural models are discrepant with outcomes; that is, semantic models are used for problem solving. Episodic models, encoded by multiple means (e.g., verbally, auditorially, visually) develop last and consist of episodes of experience that can be accessed unconsciously and regulate behavior when individuals are emotionally aroused. Of interest is the relation among these emerging models, the patterns of information processing contained in them, and the means of guiding their development in children experiencing distorted relationships. Treatment approaches drawn from social learning theory, family systems theory, cognitive therapy, and psychodynamic theory are associated with the memory systems and integrated into an approach to treatment.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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