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Sibling Survivors of Suicide: A Retrospective Exploration of Familial Attachment During BereavementMacor, Mark 17 April 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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When Does Brand Matter? An Empirical Examination of the Roles of Attachment, Experience, and Identity within Consumer-Brand RelationshipsEwing, Douglas R. 03 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Sacrificing the Shepherd: An analysis of popular constructions of motherhood withinparenting and pregnancy manualsDaubenmire, Elizabeth 07 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Attachment and emotion regulation: changes in affect and vagal tone during stressMovahed Abtahi, Mahsa 22 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Empathy Development inToddlers and the Influence of Parenting, Attachment, and TemperamentWagers, Keshia B. 18 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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THE SEPARATE AND COMBINED EFFECTS OF MOTHER, FATHER, AND PEER ATTACHMENT ON YOUNG ADOLESCENTS’ SOCIAL, BEHAVIORAL, AND EMOTIONAL ADJUSTMENTHellenthal, Rebecca Lynn 05 September 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Electron loss kinetics in non-self-sustained plasmas and the effect of vibrational nonequilibriumFrederickson, Kraig Alan 13 March 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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The Link Between Insecure Attachment and Depression: Two Potential PathwaysDeVito, Cassandra C 29 August 2014 (has links) (PDF)
A wealth of research demonstrates a strong link between insecure attachment and depressive symptoms. However, thus far no work has discerned different pathways to depression for each of the insecure subtypes: anxious and avoidant attachment. This work looks at the behaviors that couples engage in during a conflict interaction as a potential mediator for the attachment-depression relationship, with different behaviors mediating the link between anxious and avoidant attachment and depression. For anxiously attached individuals, it was predicted that lack of support and response from the partner (actual or perceived) would account for the relationship between their attachment and depressive symptoms. While for avoidant individuals, it was predicted that partners’ hostile behaviors would account for a positive association between attachment and depression, but humor and relationship-enhancing behaviors would account for a negative association between attachment and depression. Results from this work indicated that for anxiously attached women, their perceptions of their partners’ responsiveness and their partners’ actual hostility mediated the link between their attachment and depressive symptoms.
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The Relationships Among Adult Attachment, General Self-Disclosure, and Perceived Organizational TrustAdams, Samuel Hamilton 31 March 2004 (has links)
Organizations often take trust for granted or ignore it, although trust is important for organizational learning and performance. Organizations must continuously learn if they are to survive, and trust facilitates individual and organizational learning. However, many authors either mention the importance of trust, or assume trust is present, and then discuss other topics as if little can be done to better understand the antecedents of trust or to improve trust in an organization. In particular, prior to this study, researchers had not explored the influence of adult attachment and disclosiveness on organizational trust. Human resources development professionals can play a vital role by helping leaders in their organizations attain strategic goals, however, no research study done previously has focused on how trust in an organization is influenced by adult attachment and disclosiveness. There is a need to better understand organizational trust because in today's global economy, an organization's ability to survive may depend in part on individual and organizational learning facilitated by trust.
This study focused on a main research question "What portion of the variance in employees' perceptions of organizational trust do employees' adult attachment and disclosiveness explain?" During this research, a revised instrument for measuring organizational trust was developed. The findings of this study showed that disclosiveness did not have a statistically significant influence on organizational trust. In contrast, fearful attachment, in particular was shown to have a modest, statistically significant, and negative influence on organizational trust. / Ph. D.
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The Relationship between Involvement, Strain, and the Criminality of Fathers of At-Risk ChildrenMcFarren, Matthew Alan 10 April 2007 (has links)
Robert Agnew proposed a new version of strain theory in 1992. In this article, Agnew argued that strain is not only a result of the blocked opportunity to achieve goals as Merton had argued, but that strain also results from the removal of positively valued stimuli and the presence of negative stimuli. With such a theory, criminologist had focused on how this may explain juvenile delinquency. Yet very little attention was given to how this may affect adult criminality as well. Similarly, Hirschi (1969) presented social control theory as a means of describing the causes of juvenile delinquency. While these theories have been repeatedly tested and supported with respect to delinquency, they have rarely been used to describe adult criminality. This paper intends to compare the utility of Agnew's general strain theory and Hirschi's control theory in explaining the criminal behavior of fathers. For general strain theory, it is predicted that fathers who have either high contact and low relationship quality or who have low contact and high relationship quality will have significantly higher criminal activity than those who have high contact and relationship quality or low contact and relationship quality. Conversely, social control theory predicts that fathers who have low relationship qualities with their children are more likely to commit criminal acts. This paper aims to ascertain which of these hypotheses is more accurate. / Master of Science
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