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Dive into the research topics where Kelly A. Brennan is active.

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Featured researches published by Kelly A. Brennan.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 1995

Dimensions of Adult Attachment, Affect Regulation, and Romantic Relationship Functioning

Kelly A. Brennan; Phillip R. Shaver

Recent research has suggested that adult attachment style, an orientation to relationships thought to be determined by child-hood relationships with parents and subsequent experiences with important attachment figures, affects the experience of romantic love. Several hypotheses were generated regarding attachment-style differences in affect-regulation strategies (nonintimate sexual behavior, alcohol use, and eating disorders) and attachment experiences and dynamics in couples (e.g., relationship satisfaction, partner-matching on attachment style). These hypotheses were tested using seven theoretically derived attachment scales, which reveal the specific attributes of a persons attachment style. Results indicate substantial associations between attachment dimensions and relationship satisfaction, nonintimate sexuality, eating disorders, and motives for drinking, and replicate previous research showing nonrandom but weak pairing of attachment styles in dating couples.


Journal of Counseling Psychology | 2000

Dynamic processes underlying adult attachment organization: Toward an attachment theoretical perspective on the healthy and effective self.

Frederick G. Lopez; Kelly A. Brennan

Contemporary attachment theory is inspiring a burgeoning literature on adult attachment. This literature offers counseling psychology a compelling framework for understanding the healthy and effective self. In this article, the authors review studies probing the cognitive processes, affect self-regulatory dynamics. and relationship behaviors associated with secure (primary) and insecure (secondary) adult attachment strategies. They then offer a portrait of the healthy, effective personality that is consistent with theory and research on adult attachment. Finally, in an effort to understand key characteristics of successful movement toward the healthy and effective self, the authors review empirical extensions of attachment theory to the therapeutic context.


Journal of Personality | 1998

Attachment Styles and Personality Disorders: Their Connections to Each Other and to Parental Divorce, Parental Death, and Perceptions of Parental Caregiving

Kelly A. Brennan; Phillip R. Shaver

Attachment theory was explored as a means of understanding the origins of personality disorders. We investigated whether adult attachment styles and personality disorders share a common underlying structure, and how both kinds of variables relate to family background factors, including parental death, parental divorce, and current representations of childhood relationships with parents. A nonclinical group of 1407 individuals, mostly adolescents and young adults, were surveyed about their attachment styles, parental marital status, parental mortality status, perceptions of treatment by parents in childhood, and 13 personality disorders. Results indicated substantial overlap between attachment and personality-disorder measures. Two of the personality-disorder dimensions are related to the two dimensions of the attachment space; that is, there is a two-dimensional space in which both the attachment patterns and most of the personality disorders can be arrayed. The one personality-disorder factor that is unrelated to attachment appears akin to psychopathy. Both personality disorders and attachment styles were associated with family-of-origin variables. Results are discussed in terms of encouraging further research to test the idea that insecure attachment and most of the personality disorders share similar developmental antecedents.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 1998

Attachment-Style Differences in Attitudes toward and Reactions to Feedback from Romantic Partners: An Exploration of the Relational Bases of Self-Esteem

Kelly A. Brennan; Jennifer K. Bosson

The authors examined attachment-style differences in reliance on partner feedback to maintain self-esteem. First, they argue that those people who value relational sources of self-esteem are more open to and affected by partner feedback than those people who derive self-esteem from competence-based sources; these differences correspond to working models of self and others. Results revealed that individuals with negative other-models are relatively averse to partner feedback, and individuals with negative self-models are distressed by feedback. Second, the authors propose that, for some, partner feedback serves as a mechanism for maintaining global self-esteem; for others, feedback is irrelevant to self-esteem. Results confirmed that the association of attachment with self-esteem is fully mediated by sources of self-esteem and partially mediated by attitudes about and reactions to partner feedback. The authors discuss their results in terms of their implications for understanding relational bases of self esteem as well as working models.


Archive | 1998

Self-report measurement of adult attachment: An integrative overview.

Kelly A. Brennan; Catherine L. Clark; Phillip R. Shaver


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 1992

Attachment Styles and the "Big Five" Personality Traits: Their Connections with Each Other and with Romantic Relationship Outcomes

Phillip R. Shaver; Kelly A. Brennan


Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 1991

Attachment Styles, Gender and Parental Problem Drinking:

Kelly A. Brennan; Phillip R. Shaver; Ann E. Tobey


Personal Relationships | 2000

The adult attachment interview and self-reports of romantic attachment: Associations across domains and methods

Phillip R. Shaver; Jay Belsky; Kelly A. Brennan


Measures of Personality and Social Psychological Attitudes#R##N#Measures of Social Psychological Attitudes | 1991

CHAPTER 6 – Measures of Depression and Loneliness

Phillip R. Shaver; Kelly A. Brennan


Archive | 1998

Adult romantic attachment and individual differences in attitudes toward physical contact in the context of adult romantic relationships.

Kelly A. Brennan; Shey Wu; Jennifer Loev

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Jay Belsky

University of California

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Jennifer K. Bosson

University of South Florida

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