Predicting prosocial personality from attachment facets: are some facets more critical than others?


Autoria(s): Gillath, Omri; Karantzas, Gery
Contribuinte(s)

Pearce, Zoe

Data(s)

01/01/2007

Resumo

Research across various countries and relationship contexts suggests that attachment anxiety and avoidance are associated with people’s prosocial feelings, tendencies, and behaviors (e.g., Gillath et al., 2005; Karantzas, Evans, & Foddy, 2007). In the present paper we extend the two dimensional model of attachment to include a series of nested facets. Doing so allowed us to examine whether the multifaceted nested factor model provides a better explanation of the associations between attachment and the components of prosocial personality as compared to the bi-factor model (attachment anxiety and avoidance). Three hundred and eighty participants, aged 18 to 33 years completed self-report measures of adult attachment and prosocial personality. Data were fitted to various models – as expected the nested model provided a better fit to the data and explained a significantly larger proportion of the variance in prosocial tendencies than the bi-factor model. The attachment facets were found to make distinct contributions to prosocial personality beyond the broad attachment dimensions (e.g., the preoccupied facet was uniquely associated with personal distress). Implications for the revised attachment structure across various prosocial contexts are discussed, as are the limitations of using the Experience in Close Relationships Scale (ECR; Brennan et al., 1998) to test a multifaceted attachment model.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30008062

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Psychological Society

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30008062/karantzas-predictingprosocial-2007.pdf

http://www.deakin.edu.au/hmnbs/psychology/seminars/colloquia/2008/readings/Burwood/gery-karantzas-colloquia-20-8-08-week-3-sem2.pdf

Tipo

Conference Paper