Adult attachment avoidance and automatic affective response to sad facial expressions |
| |
Authors: | Thomas Suslow Udo Dannlowski Volker Arolt Patricia Ohrmann |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Münster, Münster, Germany;2. Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany |
| |
Abstract: | The present work represents the first study to investigate the relationship between adult attachment avoidance and anxiety and automatic affective responses to basic facial emotions. Subliminal affective priming methods allowed for the assessment of unconscious affective reactions. An affective priming task using masked sad and happy faces, both of which are approach‐related facial expressions, was administered to 30 healthy volunteers. Participants also completed the Relationship Scales Questionnaire and measures of anxiety and depression. Attachment avoidance was negatively associated with affective priming due to sad (but not happy) facial expressions. This association occurred independently of attachment anxiety, depressivity, and trait anxiety. Attachment anxiety was not correlated with priming due to sad or happy facial expressions. The present results are consistent with the assumption that attachment avoidance moderates automatic affective reaction to sad faces. Our data indicate that avoidant attachment is related to a low automatic affective responsivity to sad facial expressions. |
| |
Keywords: | Adult attachment affective priming affective response emotion mood personality processes and individual differences social cognition |
|
|