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Attachment models of the self and others: relations with self-esteem, humanity-esteem, and parental treatment

Attachment models of the self and others: relations with self-esteem, humanity-esteem, and parental treatment
Attachment models of the self and others: relations with self-esteem, humanity-esteem, and parental treatment
The present research tested the extent to which perceptions of early childhood experiences with parents predicted general views of the self (i.e., self-esteem) and others (i.e., humanity-esteem), and whether attachment self- and other-models mediated these links. Two studies used a new measure of humanity-esteem (Luke & Maio, 2004) to achieve these ends. As expected, indices that tapped a positive model of the self in relationships were associated with high selfesteem and indices that tapped a positive model of others in relationships were associated with high humanity-esteem. Also, early attachment experiences with fathers and mothers predicted self-esteem and humanity-esteem, respectively, and these direct relations were mediated by the attachment models. The studies, therefore, provide direct evidence that attachment measures predict general favorability toward the self and others, while revealing novel differences in the roles of childhood experiences with fathers and mothers.
281-303
Luke, Michelle A.
01ebd476-0d8c-4fba-97c3-38ccf2ac0c78
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Carnelley, Katherine B.
02a55020-a0bc-480e-a0ff-c8fe56ee9c36
Luke, Michelle A.
01ebd476-0d8c-4fba-97c3-38ccf2ac0c78
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Carnelley, Katherine B.
02a55020-a0bc-480e-a0ff-c8fe56ee9c36

Luke, Michelle A., Maio, Gregory R. and Carnelley, Katherine B. (2004) Attachment models of the self and others: relations with self-esteem, humanity-esteem, and parental treatment. Personal Relationships, 11 (3), 281-303. (doi:10.1111/j.1475-6811.2004.00083.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The present research tested the extent to which perceptions of early childhood experiences with parents predicted general views of the self (i.e., self-esteem) and others (i.e., humanity-esteem), and whether attachment self- and other-models mediated these links. Two studies used a new measure of humanity-esteem (Luke & Maio, 2004) to achieve these ends. As expected, indices that tapped a positive model of the self in relationships were associated with high selfesteem and indices that tapped a positive model of others in relationships were associated with high humanity-esteem. Also, early attachment experiences with fathers and mothers predicted self-esteem and humanity-esteem, respectively, and these direct relations were mediated by the attachment models. The studies, therefore, provide direct evidence that attachment measures predict general favorability toward the self and others, while revealing novel differences in the roles of childhood experiences with fathers and mothers.

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Published date: August 2004

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 18471
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18471
PURE UUID: 4bfb6c38-2963-4fd0-8682-65b3d1015d41
ORCID for Katherine B. Carnelley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4064-8576

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Date deposited: 15 Dec 2005
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:18

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Contributors

Author: Michelle A. Luke
Author: Gregory R. Maio

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