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      Young children's representations of their families: A longitudinal follow-up study of family drawings by children living in different family settings

      , 1 , 2 , 3
      International Journal of Behavioral Development
      SAGE Publications

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          The Scientific Status of Projective Techniques

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            The Adjustment of Children with Divorced Parents: A Risk and Resiliency Perspective

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              Children's representations of attachment relationships in family drawings.

              Children's representational models of self and attachment figures were investigated in family drawings at age 8-9 in a high-risk, racially mixed sample. Drawings were scored using a series of specific signs and a group of theoretically derived, global rating scales. When specific signs were treated in a combined way (versus separately), they were significantly related to early attachment history in predicted ways. Similarly, specific rating scales were found to be significantly related to early relationship history. Analyses exploring the relative contributions of early attachment history and contemporary measures of child IQ, life stress, and emotional functioning revealed that even after contemporary influences were taken into account, attachment history made a significant contribution to the prediction of negative drawing outcome. Results were interpreted as supporting an organizational perspective on development where qualitative differences in early relationships are hypothesized to shape core representational models of the self and to exert an ongoing influence on later representational processes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Behavioral Development
                International Journal of Behavioral Development
                SAGE Publications
                0165-0254
                1464-0651
                June 30 2016
                June 30 2016
                November 2006
                : 30
                : 6
                : 529-536
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Bristol
                [2 ]King's College London
                [3 ]University of Rochester Medical Center, USA
                Article
                10.1177/0165025406072898
                7ea2b41f-2785-4484-83f2-f9f65c2af7c6
                © 2006

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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