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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Attachment anxiety and implicit self-concept of neuroticism: Associations in women but not men
Uta-susan DongesBoris EgloffAnne JachmannAnette KerstingThomas SuslowThomas Suslowsubject
SelfSelf-conceptImplicit-association testModerationNeuroticismDevelopmental psychologyCorrelationmental disordersmedicineAttachment theoryAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychologyGeneral Psychologydescription
Abstract Previous research has shown that adult attachment-related anxiety is associated with the explicit self-concept of neuroticism. It remains to be clarified whether attachment anxiety is related to the implicit self-concept of neuroticism. There is evidence that gender can moderate the strength of correlation between implicit and explicit measures. The Experiences in Close Relationships scale and the NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) were administered to 106 healthy adults along with an Implicit Association Test assessing neuroticism. Attachment anxiety correlated with NEO-FFI neuroticism, regardless of gender. Attachment anxiety was correlated with neuroticism as measured by the IAT in women but not men. Results from multiple regression analysis showed that gender was a moderator of the relationship between attachment anxiety and implicit neuroticism. Our data suggest that in the associative network of women with high attachment anxiety associative representations of the self are more strongly linked to attributes of neuroticism compared to women with low attachment anxiety.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-01-01 | Personality and Individual Differences |