Abstract
We present pilot data of a newly developed attachment measure, the Marital Attachment Interview. This interview was developed to assess adults' representations of their current relationship with a partner as an adjunct to available assessments of relationship representations of parents with young children (infant-parent attachment) and adults with their own parents (adult attachment). From this pilot study of 24 couples, we present: (1) the distribution of marital attachment classifications, (2) the concordance between marital attachment and adult attachment classifications; and (3) the associations between marital attachment classification (representation) and family factors. We then speculate about the utility of this new narrative approach for understanding how attachment in intimate relationships may be useful in appreciating components of intergenerational transmission of attachment.
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