Adult attachment styles and negativistic beliefs about the social world: The role of self-image and other-image

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Abstract

This article is concerned with the relationship between adult attachment styles and generalized negativistic social beliefs (i.e. pessimistic expectations concerning human nature and interpersonal relations). Two general dimensions of attachment styles, avoidance and anxiety, are considered to be manifestations of an individual's image of other people and of the self, respectively. We suggest that both dimensions may be a substantial basis for formulating negative beliefs about the social world. Firstly, we believe that a high level of negativistic social beliefs can be positively predicted by the growth of avoidance (negative image of others) and anxiety (negative image of self). Secondly, we formulate an expected interaction effect. Although the nature of such an interaction is ambiguous, it may be argued as having a synergistic as well as antagonistic pattern. These hypotheses were tested and supported (in favor of an antagonistic pattern of interaction in the case of the second hypothesis) on a representative sample of adult Poles (N = 853).

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Skarzyńska, K., & Radkiewicz, P. (2014). Adult attachment styles and negativistic beliefs about the social world: The role of self-image and other-image. Polish Psychological Bulletin, 45(4), 511–520. https://doi.org/10.2478/ppb-2014-0061

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