Daughter-to-Father Attachment Style and Emerging Adult Daughter's Psychological Well-Being: Mediating Role of Interpersonal Communication Motives

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Abstract

This study investigated insecure attachment of emerging adult daughters with their fathers and how it affects daughter's psychological well-being, with interpersonal communication motives taken as mediating variables. A sample of daughters (N = 243) ranging from 18 to 25 years was collected through purposive sampling from Islamabad and Rawalpindi. For this cross-sectional study, data were collected using psychometrically sound tools along with a demographic data sheet. Results revealed that anxiety and avoidance attachment style negatively correlate to young adult daughters' psychological well-being as hypothesized. Moreover, this relationship is partially mediated by interpersonal communication motives. Among communication motives, affection motive is a stronger predictor of psychological well-being scores (β =.31, p

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Jilani, S., Akhtar, M., Faize, F. A., & Khan, S. R. (2022). Daughter-to-Father Attachment Style and Emerging Adult Daughter’s Psychological Well-Being: Mediating Role of Interpersonal Communication Motives. Journal of Adult Development, 29(2), 136–146. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10804-021-09390-4

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