Dr. Elaine Scharfe
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John Bowlby (1969/1982) defined attachment as the instinct to form relational bonds with others and the development of strategies to seek and maintain proximity to these attachment figures when distressed, ill, or afraid. These strategies are internalized into representations or internal working models that help to guide interpretation of and reactions to social situations from infancy to old age. Although attachment representations are proposed to be relatively stable, a key challenge to attachment researchers is to identify conditions under which attachment patterns are likely to change. I am currently exploring mechanisms of continuity and change of attachment in the context of life transitions in particular coping with separations. In addition, I am interested in the influence of attachment behaviours on ways of coping with stress during transitions and separations, health outcomes during transitions, and cognitive reappraisals of attachment representations during transitions.
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