Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
892964 Personality and Individual Differences 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine whether reports of parental care-giving and attachment representations were associated with the self- and other-evaluative core beliefs that are implicated in cognitive models of psychopathology. Undergraduate students (n = 389; 283 [73%] female; mean age 21.9 years, s.d. 5.25) completed questionnaire measures of attachment, self- and other-evaluative core beliefs, parental care-giving style, and negative affect. As hypothesised, with negative affect controlled for, negative self-evaluative core beliefs were correlated with anxious attachment (rs = .397, p < .001) and with inconsistent or ambivalent maternal care-giving, but the latter effect was confined to females (rs = .303, p < .001). Correlations between negative other-evaluative core beliefs, avoidant attachment and cold and rejecting parenting were rendered non-significant when negative affect was controlled for (rs = .085 and rs = .072, respectively). Warm and responsive parenting was correlated with positive self- and other-evaluative core beliefs. Our findings are consistent with a role for parenting experiences and attachment representations in the development of negative self-evaluative core beliefs, but not negative other-evaluative core beliefs. These findings may both inform our understanding of psychopathology and have implications for therapeutic relationships.

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