Original paper
Culture and Child Attachment Patterns: a Behavioral Systems Synthesis
Abstract
We propose that the two dominant culture institutions (individualist and collectivist) are neither learned nor cognitively represented by the people who practice them. Instead, they exist as group-level payoff structures that reflect differential distributions of child attachment patterns within a society. Individualist societies reflect an overrepresentation of insecure-avoidant attachments and collectivist societies reflect an...
Paper Details
Title
Culture and Child Attachment Patterns: a Behavioral Systems Synthesis
Published Date
Jul 30, 2019
Volume
42
Issue
4
Pages
835 - 850
Citation AnalysisPro
You’ll need to upgrade your plan to Pro
Looking to understand the true influence of a researcher’s work across journals & affiliations?
- Scinapse’s Top 10 Citation Journals & Affiliations graph reveals the quality and authenticity of citations received by a paper.
- Discover whether citations have been inflated due to self-citations, or if citations include institutional bias.
Notes
History