TY - JOUR
T1 - The emotional integration of childhood experience
T2 - Physiological, facial expressive, and self-reported emotional response during the adult attachment interview
AU - Roisman, Glenn I.
AU - Tsai, Jeanne L.
AU - Chiang, Kuan Hiong Sylvia
PY - 2004/9/1
Y1 - 2004/9/1
N2 - Attachment researchers claim that individual differences in how adults talk about their early memories reflect qualitatively distinct organizations of emotion regarding childhood experiences with caregivers. Testing this assumption, the present study examined the relationship between attachment dimensions and physiological, facial expressive, as well as self-reported emotional responses during the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). Consistent with theoretical predictions, more prototypically secure adults behaviorally expressed and reported experiencing emotion consistent with the valence of the childhood events they described. Insecure adults also showed distinctive and theoretically anticipated forms of emotional response: Dismissing participants evidenced increased electrodermal activity during the interview, a sign of emotional suppression, whereas preoccupied adults showed reliable discrepancies between the valence of their inferred childhood experiences and their facial expressive as well as reported emotion during the AAI. Results substantiate a case that the AAI reflects individual differences in emotion regulation that conceptually parallel observations of attachment relationships in infancy.
AB - Attachment researchers claim that individual differences in how adults talk about their early memories reflect qualitatively distinct organizations of emotion regarding childhood experiences with caregivers. Testing this assumption, the present study examined the relationship between attachment dimensions and physiological, facial expressive, as well as self-reported emotional responses during the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). Consistent with theoretical predictions, more prototypically secure adults behaviorally expressed and reported experiencing emotion consistent with the valence of the childhood events they described. Insecure adults also showed distinctive and theoretically anticipated forms of emotional response: Dismissing participants evidenced increased electrodermal activity during the interview, a sign of emotional suppression, whereas preoccupied adults showed reliable discrepancies between the valence of their inferred childhood experiences and their facial expressive as well as reported emotion during the AAI. Results substantiate a case that the AAI reflects individual differences in emotion regulation that conceptually parallel observations of attachment relationships in infancy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=4444284878&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1037/0012-1649.40.5.776
DO - 10.1037/0012-1649.40.5.776
M3 - Article
C2 - 15355165
AN - SCOPUS:4444284878
SN - 0012-1649
VL - 40
SP - 776
EP - 789
JO - Developmental psychology
JF - Developmental psychology
IS - 5
ER -