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Pruchno, R. A.; And Others – Human Development, 1984
Argues that a single life event has the capacity to affect not one but several lives. This thesis is related to theories on attachment, roles, and convoys. The concept of life-event webs is introduced to explain complex relations among individuals within networks such as families. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Family (Sociological Unit), Intervention, Perspective Taking
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Levitt, Mary J. – Human Development, 2005
Research on the development of social relations has been largely fragmented along role-specific lines and dominated conceptually by attachment theory. The Convoy Model is presented as an alternative to traditional approaches that fail to capture the complexity of social relationships across time and context. Research based on the model converges…
Descriptors: Models, Attachment Behavior, Interpersonal Relationship, Social Networks
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Suomi, Stephen J. – Human Development, 2005
The social networks that rhesus monkeys develop in nature are centered around multiple generations of matrilineal kin embedded in larger social groupings that have some degree of distinctiveness and permanence. Within each family, infants initially grow up in the care of their mothers and the close presence of relatives, and they subsequently…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Parent Child Relationship, Mothers, Infants
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Lewis, Michael – Human Development, 2005
The classical attachment theory holds to the notion of a monotropic model. Such a model leads to a view of the mother as first and most important figure in an infant's life. A polytropic view of attachment moves us toward a model of simultaneous and multiple attachment figures. In particular, it is argued that peer attachment is a separate but…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Models, Peer Relationship, Parent Child Relationship
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Takahashi, Keiko – Human Development, 2005
This article addresses how close relationships can be conceptualized so that they can be accurately understood over the life span. First, two typical clusters of theories of close relationships, the attachment theory and the social network theory, are compared and discussed with regard to their fundamental but controversial assumptions regarding…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Attachment Behavior, Adults, Models