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Maternal and paternal sensitivity: Key determinants of child attachment security examined through meta-analysis.

Authors :
Madigan S
Deneault AA
Duschinsky R
Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ
Schuengel C
van IJzendoorn MH
Ly A
Fearon RMP
Eirich R
Verhage ML
Source :
Psychological bulletin [Psychol Bull] 2024 Jul; Vol. 150 (7), pp. 839-872. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 06.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Sensitive caregiving behavior, which involves the ability to notice, interpret, and quickly respond to a child's signals of need and/or interest, is a central determinant of secure child-caregiver attachment. Yet, significant heterogeneity in effect sizes exists across the literature, and sources of heterogeneity have yet to be explained. For all child-caregiver dyads, there was a significant and positive pooled association between caregiver sensitivity and parent-child attachment ( r = .25, 95% CI [.22, .28], k = 174, 230 effect sizes, N = 22,914). We also found a positive association between maternal sensitivity and child attachment security ( r = .26, 95% CI [.22, .29], k = 159, 202 effect sizes, N = 21,483), which was equivalent in magnitude to paternal sensitivity and child attachment security ( r = .21, 95% CI [.14, 27], k = 22, 23 effect sizes, N = 1,626). Maternal sensitivity was also negatively associated with all three classifications of insecure attachment (avoidant: k = 43, r = -.24 [-.34, -.13]; resistant: k = 43, r = -.12 [-.19, -.06]; disorganized: k = 24, r = -.19 [-.27, -.11]). For maternal sensitivity, associations were larger in studies that used the Attachment Q-Sort (vs. the Strange Situation), used the Maternal Behavior Q-Sort (vs. Ainsworth or Emotional Availability Scales), had strong (vs. poor) interrater measurement reliability, had a longer observation of sensitivity, and had less time elapse between assessments. For paternal sensitivity, associations were larger in older (vs. younger) fathers and children. These findings confirm the importance of both maternal and paternal sensitivity for the development of child attachment security and add understanding of the methodological and substantive factors that allow this effect to be observed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939-1455
Volume :
150
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Psychological bulletin
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38709619
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000433