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Contributions of the mother–infant relationship to dissociative, borderline, and conduct symptoms in young adulthood

✍ Scribed by Karlen Lyons-Ruth


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
213 KB
Volume
29
Category
Article
ISSN
0163-9641

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Recent high‐risk longitudinal studies have documented a unique contribution of the quality of the early mother–child relationship to diverse forms of psychopathology in young adulthood, even with family economic status, later traumatic experiences, and some genetic factors controlled. In addition, measures of attachment‐related deviations in caregiver–infant interaction predict more than measures of infant attachment behavior alone. This article reviews those findings in the context of cross‐disciplinary thinking on the importance of shared subjectivities in human evolution and development and in the context of recent studies beginning to map the intersection between processes of interaction and the development of the child's propensities to share mental states with others.