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Jan 2006
ISBN 0262033488
507 pp.
42 illus.
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Attachment and Bonding
C. Sue Carter , Lieselotte Ahnert , K. E. Grossmann , Sarah B. Hrdy , Michael E. Lamb , Stephen W. Porges and Norbert Sachser

Attachment and bonding are evolved processes; the mechanisms that permit the development of selective social bonds are assumed to be very ancient, based on neural circuitry rooted deep in mammalian evolution, but the nature and timing of these processes and their ultimate and proximate causes are only beginning to be understood. In this Dahlem Workshop Report, scientists from different disciplines-including anthropology, psychology, psychiatry, and behavioral biology-come together to explore the concepts of attachment and bonding from diverse perspectives. In their studies they seek to understand the causes or the consequences of attachment and bonding in general and their different qualities in individual development in particular. They address such questions as biobehavioral processes in attachment and bonding; early social attachment and its influences on later patterns of behavior; bonding later in life; and adaptive and maladaptive (or pathological) outcomes.

Table of Contents
 The Dahlem Workshops
 List of Participants
1 Introduction
by C. S. Carter, L. Ahnert, K. E. Grossmann, S. B. Hrdy, M. E. Lamb, S. W. Porges, and N. Sachser
2 Evolutionary Context of Human Development:The Cooperative Breeding Model
by S. B. Hrdy
3 The Role of Social Engagement in Attachment and Bonding: A Phylogenetic Perspective
by S. W. Porges
4 "Stepping Away from the Mirror:Pride and Shame in Adventures of Companionship" -- Reflections on the Nature and Emotional Needs of Infant Intersubjectivity
by C. Trevarthen
5 Biological Perspectives on Social Attachment and Bonding
by C. S. Carter
6 Neurobiological and Molecular Approaches to Attachment and Bonding
by E. B. Keverne
7 Adult Social Bonding:Insights from Studies in Nonhuman Mammals
by N. Sachser
8 Plasticity of Innate Behavior:Experiences throughout Life Affect Maternal Behavior and Its Neurobiology
by A. S. Fleming
9 The Developmental and Evolutionary Psychology of Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment
by J. Belsky
10 Universality of Human Social Attachment as an Adaptive Process
by K. E. Grossmann and K. Grossmann
11 Parenting and Alloparenting:The Impact on Attachment in Humans
by L. Ahnert
12 Attachment and Stress in Early Development:Does Attachment Add to the Potency of Social Regulators of Infant Stress?
by M. R. Gunnar
13 Attachment Disturbances Associated with Early Severe Deprivation
by T. G. O'Connor
14 Disorganization of Behavioral and Attentional Strategies toward Primary Attachment Figures:From Biologic to Dialogic Processes
by K. H. Hennighausen and K. Lyons-Ruth
15 Group Report:Biobehavioral Processes in Attachment and Bonding
by J. F. Leckman, Rapporteur C. S. Carter, M. B. Hennessy, S. B. Hrdy, E. B. Keverne, G. Klann-Delius, C. Schradin, D. Todt, and D. von Holst
16 Group Report:Early Social Attachment and Its Consequences: The Dynamics of a Developing Relationship
by R. A. Thompson, Rapporteur K. Braun, K. E. Grossmann, M. R. Gunnar, M. Heinrichs, H. Keller, T. G. O'Connor, G. Spangler, E. Voland, and S. Wang
17 Group Report:Beyond Infant Attachment:The Origins of Bonding in Later Life
by C. A. Pedersen, Rapporteur L. Ahnert, G. Anzenberger, J. Belsky, P. Draper, A. S. Fleming, K. Grossmann, N. Sachser, S. Sommer, D. P. Tietze, and L. J. Young
18 Group Report:Adaptive and Maladaptive Outcomes
by G. W. Kraemer, Rapporteur M. E. Lamb, G. A. Liotti, K. Lyons-Ruth, G. Meinlschmidt, A. Schlmerich, M. Steele, and C. Trevarthen
 Name Index
 Subject Index
 
 


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