Hart Joshua, Shaver Phillip R, Goldenberg Jamie L
Psychology Department, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2005 Jun;88(6):999-1013. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.88.6.999.
On the basis of prior work integrating attachment theory and terror management theory, the authors propose a model of a tripartite security system consisting of dynamically interrelated attachment, self-esteem, and worldview processes. Four studies are presented that, combined with existing evidence, support the prediction derived from the model that threats to one component of the security system result in compensatory defensive activation of other components. Further, the authors predicted and found that individual differences in attachment style moderate the defenses. In Studies 1 and 2, attachment threats motivated worldview defense among anxiously attached participants and motivated self-enhancement (especially among avoidant participants), effects similar to those caused by mortality salience. In Studies 3 and 4, a worldview threat and a self-esteem threat caused attachment-related proximity seeking among fearful participants and avoidance of proximity among dismissing participants. The authors' model provides an overarching framework within which to study attachment, self-esteem, and worldviews.
基于先前将依恋理论与恐惧管理理论相结合的研究工作,作者提出了一个由动态相互关联的依恋、自尊和世界观过程组成的三方安全系统模型。文中呈现了四项研究,这些研究与现有证据相结合,支持了从该模型得出的预测,即对安全系统一个组成部分的威胁会导致其他组成部分的补偿性防御激活。此外,作者预测并发现依恋风格的个体差异会调节防御机制。在研究1和研究2中,依恋威胁促使焦虑型依恋的参与者进行世界观防御,并促使自我提升(尤其是回避型参与者),这些效应类似于死亡凸显所引发的效应。在研究3和研究4中,世界观威胁和自尊威胁导致恐惧型参与者产生与依恋相关的接近寻求行为,而在轻视型参与者中则导致回避接近行为。作者的模型提供了一个总体框架,可在其中研究依恋、自尊和世界观。