Grazia Terrone
University of Foggia
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Featured researches published by Grazia Terrone.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Cecilia Serena Pace; Simona Di Folco; V. Guerriero; Alessandra Santona; Grazia Terrone
Introduction: Recent literature has shown that the good outcome of adoption would mostly depend on the quality of adoptive parenting, which is strongly associated with the security of parental internal working models (IWMs) of attachment. Specifically, attachment states-of-mind of adoptive mothers classified as free and autonomous and without lack of resolution of loss or trauma could represent a good protective factor for adopted children, previously maltreated and neglected. While most research on adoptive families focused on pre-school and school-aged children, the aim of this study was to assess the concordance of IWMs of attachment in adoptive dyads during adolescence. Method: Our pilot-study involved 76 participants: 30 adoptive mothers (mean age = 51.5 ± 4.3), and their 46 late-adopted adolescents (mean age = 13.9 ± 1.6), who were all aged 4–9 years old at time of adoption (mean age = 6.3 ± 1.5). Attachment representations of adopted adolescents were assessed by the Friend and Family Interview (FFI), while adoptive mothers’ state-of-mind with respect to attachment was classified by the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). Adolescents’ verbal intelligence was controlled for. Results: Late-adopted adolescents were classified as follows: 67% secure, 26% dismissing, and 7% preoccupied in the FFI, while their adoptive mothers’ AAI classifications were 70% free-autonomous, 7% dismissing, and 23% unresolved. We found a significant concordance of 70% (32 dyads) between the secure–insecure FFI and AAI classifications. Specifically adoptive mothers with high coherence of transcript and low unresolved loss tend to have late-adopted children with high secure attachment, even if the adolescents’ verbal intelligence made a significant contribution to this prediction. Discussion: Our results provides an empirical contribution to the literature concerning the concordance of attachment in adoptive dyads, highlighting the beneficial impact of highly coherent states-of-mind of adoptive mothers on the attachment representations of their late-adopted adolescent children.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Alessandra Santona; Angela Tagini; Diego Sarracino; Pietro De Carli; Cecilia Serena Pace; Laura Lucia Parolin; Grazia Terrone
Internal working models (IWMs) of attachment can moderate the effect of maternal depression on mother–child interactions and child development. Clinical depression pre-dating birthgiving has been found to predict incoherent and less sensitive caregiving. Dysfunctional patterns observed, included interactive modes linked to feeding behaviors which may interfere with hunger–satiation, biological rhythms, and the establishment of children’s autonomy and individuation. Feeding interactions between depressed mothers and their children seem to be characterized by repetitive interactive failures: children refuse food through oppositional behavior or negativity. The aim of this study was to investigate parenting skills in the context of feeding in mothers with major depression from the point of view of attachment theory. This perspective emphasizes parents’ emotion, relational and affective history and personal resources. The sample consisted of 60 mother–child dyads. Mothers were divided into two groups: 30 with Major Depression and 30 without disorders. Children’s age ranged between 12 and 36 months The measures employed were the Adult Attachment Interview and the Scale for the Evaluation of Alimentary Interactions between Mothers and Children. Insecure attachment prevailed in mothers with major depression, with differences on the Subjective Experience and State of Mind Scales. Groups also differed in maternal sensitivity, degrees of interactive conflicts and negative affective states, all of which can hinder the development of adequate interactive patterns during feeding. The results suggest that IWMs can constitute an indicator for the evaluation of the relational quality of the dyad and that evaluations of dyadic interactions should be considered when programming interventions.
Psychotherapy Research | 2017
Sergio Salvatore; Omar Gelo; Alessandro Gennaro; Roberto Metrangolo; Grazia Terrone; Valeria Pace; Claudia Venuleo; Annalisa Venezia; Enrico Ciavolino
Abstract Objective: The aim of the study is to validate the ability of ACASM (Automated Co-occurrence Analysis for Semantic Mapping) to provide a representation of the content of the therapeutic exchange that is useful for clinical analysis. Method: We compared the clinical case analyses of a good outcome psychodynamic therapy performed by a group of clinicians (n = 5) based on the verbatim transcripts (transcript-based analysis) with the clinical case analyses performed by another group of clinicians (n = 5) based on the ACASM representation of the same sessions (ACASM-based analysis). Comparison concerned two levels: the descriptive level and the interpretative level of the clinical case analysis. Results: Findings showed that, inconsistently with our hypothesis, ACASM-based descriptions of the case obtained worse evaluations than transcript-based descriptions of the case (on all 3 criteria adopted). On the contrary, consistently with our hypothesis, ACASM is undistinguishable from the verbatim transcripts as regards the case interpretation (on 2 out of 3 criteria adopted). Conclusions: ACASM provides a description of the case that, though different from the one provided by the transcripts, enables clinicians to elaborate clinical interpretations of the case which approximate those produced by clinicians working directly on verbatim transcripts.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2016
Alessandro Musetti; Grazia Terrone; Paola Corsano; Barbara Magnani; Sergio Salvatore
Background: In the present study, we have explored the link among styles of attachment and psychopathology in drug users. We know that insecure attachment predisposes the individuals the development of drug-addiction and psychopathological symptoms. However, we do not know which attachment is more frequent in drug users and which is related to particular psychopathological symptoms. The aim of the present work is to explore the relationship between childhood attachment state of mind, attachment in close relationships, parental bonding and psychopathology in sample of Italian substance users. Methods: We explored, in a sample of 70 drug users and drug-addicted patients, the childhood attachment state of mind measured by the Adult Attachment Interview, the attachment in close relationships by the Relationship Questionnaire and parental bonding measured by the Parental Bonding Instrument. The Symptom Check-List-90-R (SCL-90-R) measured psychopathological symptoms. Results: We found that parental bonding, rather than state of mind concerning childhood attachment or attachment in close relationships, is related to the psychopathological manifestation of anxiety, hostility, depression, and paranoid ideation in the sample. The latter occurs frequently in our sample, independent of state of mind concerning child attachment, attachment in close relationships, and parental bonding, suggesting its role either as a factor that favors a bad image of the participants’ own relationships or as a direct effect of consuming drugs. Conclusion: These results have clinical implications on suggesting ways of interventions that prevent drug-addiction, which should include the evaluation of attachment in the prodromic phases of substance use onset or rehabilitation programs to prevent and manage psychotic-like symptoms.
MALTRATTAMENTO E ABUSO ALL’INFANZIA | 2017
Grazia Terrone; Alessandro Musetti; Simona Di Folco; Rocco Filipponeri Pergola
La psicopatologia, di uno o di entrambi i partner, puo essere considerata un fattore di vulnerabilita che incide sulla capacita della coppia di gestire le esperienze stressanti e puo interferire con le funzioni di caregiving. In particolare, la depressione esperita durante la gravidanza e l’eventuale depressione del partner sono fattori che aumentano la probabilita sia nella madre sia nel padre di dar luogo a modalita relazionali imprevedibili e incoerenti nella comunicazione emotiva con il proprio bambino. Alla luce dei dati che mettono in relazione il comportamento materno disattento e distaccato e il comportamento intrusivo e rifiutante con la depressione materna, ci sono buone ragioni per ipotizzare che i figli di madri depresse abbiano una maggiore probabilita di sviluppare un attaccamento insicuro e di manifestare disturbi del comportamento e sintomi depressivi. In questa relazione interattiva quale funzione svolge il padre? Il ruolo paterno e un potenziale fattore protettivo, all’interno del sistema padre-madre-bambino? Lo scopo di questa rassegna e quello di delineare lo stato dell’arte relativo allo studio della depressione materna come fattore di rischio per lo sviluppo delle competenze genitoriali ed evidenziare il ruolo paterno nella relazione madre-bambino, con una funzione protettiva rispetto ai rischi della depressione materna.
Giornale italiano di psicologia | 2017
Alessandro Musetti; Roberto Cattivelli; Pablo Zuglian; Grazia Terrone; Stefano Pozzoli; Francesca Capelli; Gianluca Castelnuovo
Rassegna di Psicologia | 2013
Grazia Terrone; Alessandra Santona
GIORNALE ITALIANO DI PSICOLOGIA | 2012
Grazia Terrone; Alessandra Santona
Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy | 2018
Cecilia Serena Pace; Simona Di Folco; V. Guerriero; Grazia Terrone
International Journal of Psychoanalysis and Education | 2017
Grazia Terrone