Chopik, W. J., Edelstein, R. S., & Grimm, K. J. (2019). Longitudinal changes in attachment orientation over a 59-year period. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 116(4), 598-611. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/pspp0000167
Abstract: Research on individual differences in attachment—and their links to emotion, cognition, and behavior in close relationships—has proliferated over the last several decades. However, the majority of this research has focused on children and young adults. Little is known about mean-level changes in attachment orientation beyond early life, in part due to a dearth of longitudinal data on attachment across the life span. The current study used a Q-Sort-based measure of attachment to examine mean-level changes in attachment orientation from age 13 to 72 using data from the Block and Block Longitudinal Study, the Intergenerational Studies, and the Radcliffe College Class of 1964 Sample (total N = 628). Multilevel modeling was employed to estimate growth curve trajectories across the combined samples. We found that attachment anxiety declined on average with age, particularly during middle age and older adulthood. Attachment avoidance decreased in a linear fashion across the life span. Being in a relationship predicted lower levels of anxiety and avoidance across adulthood. Men were higher in attachment avoidance at each point in the life span. Taken together, these findings provide much-needed insight into how attachment orientations change over long stretches of time. We conclude with a discussion about the challenges of studying attachment dynamics across the life course and across specific transitions.
Popular version: First Study To Investigate How Attachment Style Changes Through Multiple Decades Of Life. Christian Jarrett. Research Digest, May 9 2019. https://digest.bps.org.uk/2019/05/09/first-study-to-investigate-how-attachment-style-changes-through-multiple-decades-of-life
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The data come from five historic projects, involving personality
surveys of 628 US citizens born between 1920 and 1967. The shortest of
these was 9 years and the longest was 47 years. They all involved
participants being assessed repeatedly over many years using the
California Adult Q-sort – a measure that includes 100 personality items.
Chopik and his team focused on 14 key items from this measure, allowing
them to compile scores for “anxious attachment” and “avoidant
attachment” for each participant. People who score highly on “anxious
attachment” fear rejection and constantly seek reassurance. People who
score highly on “avoidant attachment” find intimacy uncomfortable and
find it difficult to provide emotional support to others. Low scores on
both anxiety and avoidance is a sign of having a secure attachment
style.
The researchers stitched the data from the five historic samples
together, so that they had scores for anxious and avoidant attachment
spanning 59 years. Past research has already looked at how people of
different ages vary in their attachment scores, but one problem with
that kind of cross-sectional research is that any differences between
people of different ages could be due to generational differences,
rather than due to developmental trends. The new research largely
overcome that problem, with Chopik and his team able to identify clear
age-related trends in the same individuals over time.
Specifically, the team found that people’s anxious attachment tended
to be high in adolescence, increasing into their young adulthood, before
then declining through life into their middle and old age. Avoidant
attachment showed less change with age, but started higher in
adolescence and then declined in linear fashion through life.
The researchers surmised that attachment anxiety and avoidance may be
high in adolescence due to the stressful transition from having
primarily close bonds with parents to having meaningful relationships
with peers and first romantic relationships. They also pointed out that
mid-life – when anxiety and avoidance tend to decline – is arguably the
time when we are most invested in various social roles and relationships
and that “…increases in security often result from people becoming more
comfortable in their relationships, gaining more evidence that the
relationship will last, and having spouses who serve attachment needs
and functions that promote close relations.” Meanwhile, in later life,
when attachment anxiety and avoidance are typically lowest, they said
people tend to be very focused on the here and now – “declines in
anxiety and avoidance may reflect the efforts of older adults to become
closer to their close friends and family,” they said.
Another finding from the study was that at all times of life, being
in a close romantic relationship tended to go hand in hand with scoring
lower on attachment anxiety and avoidance. “Romantic partners reward
appropriate behaviour and admonish inappropriate behaviour … ,” the
researchers said. “By investing in these social roles, individuals
adhere to the rules and appropriate behaviour of close relationships and
may change how they approach relationships accordingly, perhaps
becoming more secure.”
It’s worth noting that this research looked at group averages, which
inevitably masks the idiosyncratic ways that some people may change in
their attachment style through life. The study is also limited by only
involving participants from the US, the fact that it relied on
extracting attachment scores from a measure not designed for that
purpose, and that data was stitched together from multiple samples so as
to cover the period from adolescence to later life. In a way, however,
that last point is also a positive: “given the many ways in which these
samples differed, the amount of consistency across the samples in
estimating changes over time in attachment is even more remarkable. The
converging evidence is a testament to the robustness of these results,
such that they were found under different conditions in samples
collected between 1936 and 2016,” the researchers explained.
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