Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ashley S. Holland is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ashley S. Holland.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2007

The Adult Attachment Interview and Self-Reports of Attachment Style: An Empirical Rapprochement

Ashley S. Holland; Keren Fortuna; R. Chris Fraley; Eric Clausell; Alexis M. Clarke

Although 10 studies have been published on the empirical overlap of the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and measures of self-reported attachment style, results in this literature have been inconsistently interpreted in narrative reviews. This report was designed as a rapprochement of the AAI and attachment style literatures and includes 3 studies. Study 1 (combined N = 961) is a meta-analytic review showing that by J. Cohens (1992) criteria (mean r = .09), the association between AAI security and attachment style dimensions is trivial to small. Study 2 (N = 160) confirms meta-analytic results with state-of-the-art assessments of attachment security and also examines attachment dimensions in relation to the Big 5 personality traits. Finally, Study 3 is an investigation of 50 engaged couples that shows that developmental and social psychological measures of attachment security predict somewhat distinct--though theoretically anticipated--aspects of functioning in adult relationships.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2012

Child anger proneness moderates associations between child-mother attachment security and child behavior with mothers at 33 months.

Nancy L. McElwain; Ashley S. Holland; Jennifer M. Engle; Maria S. Wong

Child-mother attachment security, assessed via a modified Strange Situation procedure (Cassidy & Marvin, with the MacArthur Attachment Working Group, 1992), and parent-reported child proneness to anger were examined as correlates of observed child behavior toward mothers during a series of interactive tasks (N = 120, 60 girls). Controlling for maternal sensitivity and child gender and expressive language ability, greater attachment security, and lower levels of anger proneness were related to more child responsiveness to maternal requests and suggestions during play and snack sessions. As hypothesized, anger proneness also moderated several security-behavior associations. Greater attachment security was related to (a) more committed compliance during clean-up and snack-delay tasks for children high on anger proneness, (b) more self-assertiveness during play and snack for children moderate or high on anger proneness, and (c) more help-seeking during play and snack for children moderate or low on anger proneness. Findings further our understanding of the behavioral correlates of child-mother attachment security assessed during late toddlerhood via the Cassidy-Marvin system and underscore child anger proneness as a moderator of attachment-related differences in child behavior during this developmental period.


Developmental Psychology | 2014

Getting Acquainted: Actor and Partner Effects of Attachment and Temperament on Young Children's Peer Behavior.

Nancy L. McElwain; Ashley S. Holland; Jennifer M. Engle; Brian G. Ogolsky

Guided by a dyadic view of childrens peer behavior, this study assessed actor and partner effects of attachment security and temperament on young childrens behavior with an unfamiliar peer. At 33 months of age, child-mother attachment security was assessed via a modified Strange Situation procedure, and parents reported on child temperament (anger proneness and social fearfulness). At 39 months, same-sex children (N = 114, 58 girls) were randomly paired, and child dyads were observed during 3 laboratory visits occurring over 1 month. Actor-partner interdependence models, tested via multilevel modeling, revealed that actor security, partner anger proneness, and acquaintanceship (e.g., initial vs. later visits) combined to predict child behavior. Actor security predicted more responsiveness to the new peer partner at the initial visit, regardless of partner anger proneness. Actor security continued to predict responsiveness at the 2nd and 3rd visits when partner anger was low, but these associations were nonsignificant when partner anger was high. Actor security also predicted a less controlling assertiveness style at the initial visit when partner anger proneness was high, yet this association was nonsignificant by the final visit. The findings shed light on the dynamic nature of young childrens peer behavior and indicate that attachment security is related to behavior in expected ways during initial interactions with a new peer, but may change as children become acquainted.


Developmental Psychology | 2016

Child-child similarity on attachment and temperament as predictors of positive interaction during acquaintanceship at age 3.

Nancy L. McElwain; Brian G. Ogolsky; Jennifer M. Engle; Ashley S. Holland; Elissa Thomann Mitchell

Child-child similarity on attachment and temperament were examined, in turn, as predictors of interaction quality between previously unacquainted children. At 33 months, child-mother attachment security was assessed, and parents reported on child temperament. At 39 months, 114 children were randomly paired into 57 same-sex dyads and observed during 3 laboratory visits over a 1-month period. Positive interaction (composed of ratings of dyadic coordination, social play complexity, and shared positive affect) was assessed from recordings of play sessions at each visit. Multilevel models revealed that child-child similarity on (a) attachment security predicted more rapid increases in positive interaction across the 3 visits for dyads averaging high security, (b) temperamental pleasure predicted more positive interaction, on average, for dyads averaging moderate to high pleasure, and (c) temperamental anger and fearfulness yielded equivocal results. Developmental and methodological implications of investigating child-child similarity on attachment and temperament as a window into the acquaintanceship process among young children are considered. (PsycINFO Database Record


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2013

Interpersonal and genetic origins of adult attachment styles: a longitudinal study from infancy to early adulthood.

R. Chris Fraley; Cathryn Booth-LaForce; Margaret Tresch Owen; Ashley S. Holland


Developmental Psychology | 2008

Adult Romantic Relationships as Contexts of Human Development: A Multimethod Comparison of Same-Sex Couples with Opposite-Sex Dating, Engaged, and Married Dyads.

Eric Clausell; Ashley S. Holland; Keren Fortuna; Chryle Elieff


Developmental Psychology | 2010

Adult Attachment Security and Young Adults' Dating Relationships over Time: Self-Reported, Observational, and Physiological Evidence.

Ashley S. Holland


Child Development | 2006

An Experimental Manipulation of Retrospectively Defined Earned and Continuous Attachment Security

Keren Fortuna; Ashley S. Holland


Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 2008

Big Five personality traits and relationship quality: Self-reported, observational, and physiological evidence

Ashley S. Holland


Developmental Psychology | 2011

Attachment states of mind and the quality of young adults' sibling relationships.

Keren Fortuna; Katherine C. Haydon; Ashley M. Groh; Ashley S. Holland

Collaboration


Dive into the Ashley S. Holland's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Keren Fortuna

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Margaret Tresch Owen

University of Texas at Dallas

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge