Awardee OrganizationUNIV OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK
Description
Abstract Text
The ability to form and maintain good social relationships in
adolescence is an important indicator of healthy functioning and an
important predictor of healthy psychological and social
development later in life (kupersmidt, Cole, & Dodge, 1990;
parker & Asher, 1987). Thus, attempts to understand potential
contributors to individual differences in social relationships in
adolesence are important. Bowlby's attachment theory (1969/82,
1973, 1980) suggests that an individuals' mental representations
related to attachment also to feelings, representations, and the
processing of information within these relationships. The goalof
this study is to increase understanding of how an adolescent's
representation of attachment is related to current relationships
(with both parents and perrs) as well as to the creation of new
relationships. The proposed study is the first to examine the
connections between attachment and a variety of social
relationships. The questions we propose to ask are listed below.
1. Is attachment related to adolescents' (a) representations
of their parents, (b) information processing of parent-relted
stimuli, and (c) adolescent-parent behavior?
2. Is attachment related to adolescents' (a) representations
of familiar peers, and (b) ongoing peer relationships?
3. Is attachment related to the creation of new
relationships in adolescence? Specifically, is attachment related to
adolescents' (a) representations of unfamiliar peers, (b) social
information-seeking related to unfamiliar peers, and (c) initial
behavior with unfamiliar peers?
Subjects will be 180 10th-grade students and their mothers and
fathers. We will use a multi-method design. Measures will include
the Adult Attachment Interview, questionnaire measures,
observations of behavioral interaction, peer-, teacher-, and self-
reports of social relations and behavior, and experimental
information-processing tasks.
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
CFDA Code
865
DUNS Number
790934285
UEI
NPU8ULVAAS23
Project Start Date
30-September-1997
Project End Date
31-August-2002
Budget Start Date
01-September-1998
Budget End Date
31-August-1999
Project Funding Information for 1998
Total Funding
$233,673
Direct Costs
$167,341
Indirect Costs
$66,332
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
1998
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
$233,673
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
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