Glossary / Lexicon
Anxious attachment
Anxious attachment refers to an insecure relationship in which an infant or child shows ambivalence about seeking reassurance or security from an attachment figure.
Related Articles | |
Avoidant attachment at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Avoidant attachment refers to a pattern of attachment in which an infant avoids contact with the parent . . . Read More | |
School refusal behavior at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
School refusal behavior refers to a form of anxious Behavior in which the child refuses to attend classes . . . Read More | |
Preservation of sameness at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Preservation of sameness: preservation of sameness refers to a A characteristic of children with autistic . . . Read More | |
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder refers to Cluster C (anxious or fearful) personality disorder . . . Read More | |
Adult attachment at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Adult attachment refers to the concept of attachment that is used to describe and understand close relationships . . . Read More | |
Preoccupied (anxious/ambivalent) attachment at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Preoccupied (anxious/ambivalent) attachment refers to the style of attachment in which people are low . . . Read More | |
Physical neglect at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Physical neglect refers to the Failure to provide for a child"s basic physical needs, including refusal . . . Read More | |
Resistant attachment at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
Resistant attachment: Resistant Attachment refers to an insecure infant-caregiver bond, characterized . . . Read More | |
El Nino at environment-database.eu | ■■ |
An El Nino is a climatic phenomenon occurring irregularly, but generally every 3 to 5 years. El Ninos . . . Read More | |
Sensory Motor Stage (0 - 24 months) (Piaget) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■ |
- Sensory Motor Stage (0 - 24 months) (Piaget) : Sensory Motor Stage (0 - 24 months) refers to the first . . . Read More |