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Research Article

Attachment and attitudes toward children: effects of security priming in parents and non-parents

, , , , &
Pages 147-168 | Received 01 Jun 2020, Accepted 24 Jan 2021, Published online: 09 Feb 2021
 

ABSTRACT

The present two-study investigation is the first to examine whether experimentally boosting attachment security (security priming) affects attitudes in the parenting domain for both parents and non-parents. Mothers (n = 72) and childless undergraduates (n = 82) were randomly assigned to a neutral or a secure prime condition and then completed measures of implicit attitudes (a child-focused version of the Go/No-Go Association Task) and explicit attitudes (self-reported) toward children. Following the priming manipulation, mothers in the secure prime condition had more positive implicit attitudes toward their child compared to mothers in the neutral prime condition. Security priming also increased mothers’ positive explicit attitudes toward their children, but only among mothers who scored high on self-reported attachment-related avoidance. No priming effects emerged among non-parents. These results provide the first evidence for a causal link between parental attachment security and parental attitudes toward children.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. Melissa Sturge-Apple for sharing her child-focused version of the Go/No-Go Association Task (GNAT-Child) with us.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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