Part I: Introduction.Simpson, Rholes, Attachment in Adulthood. Part II: Measurement Issues. Bartholomew, Shaver, Methods of Assessing Adult Attachment: Do They Converge? Brennan, Clark, Shaver, Self-Report Measurement of Adult Attachment: An Integrative Overview. Fraley, Waller, Adult Attachment Patterns: A Test of the Typological Model. Klohnen, John, Working Models of Attachment: A Theory-Based Prototype Approach. Part III: Affect Regulation. Mikulincer, Florian, The Relationship between Adult Attachment Styles and Emotional and Cognitive Reactions to Stressful Events. Rholes, Simpson, Stevens, Attachment Orientations, Social Support, and Conflict Resolution in Close Relationships. Feeney, Adult Attachment and Relationship-Centered Anxiety: Responses to Physical and Emotional Distancing. Part IV: Clinical Applications. Dozier, Tyrrell, The Role of Attachment in Therapeutic Relationships. Fraley, Davis, Shaver, Dismissing-Avoidance and the Defensive Organization of Emotion, Cognition, and Behavior. Henry, Holmes, Childhood Revisited: The Intimate Relationships of Individuals from Divorced and Conflict-Ridden Families. Roberts, Noller, The Associations between Adult Attachment and Couple Violence: The Role of Communication Patterns and Relationship Satisfaction. Part V: Conceptual and Empirical Extensions. Kirkpatrick, Evolution, Pair-Bonding, and Reproductive Strategies: A Reconceptualization of Adult Attachment. Brennan, Wu, Loev, Adult Romantic Attachment and Individual Differences in Attitudes toward Physical Contact in the Context of Adult Romantic Relationships.
Jeffry A. Simpson, PhD, is Professor of
Psychology at Texas A&M University. He received his doctorate
in psychology from the University of Minnesota in 1986. His
research focuses primarily on social interaction processes in close
relationships.
W. Steven Rholes, PhD, Professor of Psychology and
Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Texas A&M
University, received his doctorate in psychology from Princeton
University in 1978. His research, which includes topics in both
developmental and social psychology, addresses issues relating to
social cognition, affect, and close relationships.
I highly recommend Simpson and Rholes' new book on attachment
theory. It is scholarly and integrative-- it covers the important
issues and the breadth of adult attachment theory. This book is a
must read for adult attachment researchers and clinicians, as well
as for other interested scholars. - Carole Pistole, PhD, Rutgers
University
A superb resource.... This book presents a view of close
relationships that integrates ideas from social, personality,
developmental, and clinical psychology, and it will be useful to
researchers and practitioners across these areas.... The study of
adult attachment is a relatively new enterprise; this book will
help researchers identify critical questions that must be addressed
to advance our understanding of when and how attachment processes
operate in adult close relationships. - Paula R. Pietromonaco, PhD,
University of Massachusetts
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