Relations (1)

cross_type 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

John Bowlby is a foundational figure in attachment theory who identified disorganized attachment as one of the four primary patterns of infant-parent attachment, as detailed in [1], [2], and [3]. Furthermore, [4] highlights disorganized attachment as a key technical concept within the broader framework of Bowlby's attachment theory.

Facts (4)

Sources
Attachment Theory - Seattle Anxiety Specialists seattleanxiety.com Seattle Anxiety 2 facts
claimJohn Bowlby identified four types of infant-parent attachment: three organized types (secure, avoidant, and anxious/resistant) and one disorganized type.
claimBowlby's Attachment Theory identifies four types of infant-parent attachment: three organized types (secure, avoidant, and anxious/resistant) and one disorganized type.
Bowlby's Attachment Theory: 4 Styles & Classroom Impact structural-learning.com Structural Learning 1 fact
claimJohn Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth found that attachment styles impact learner behavior, identifying four key patterns: Secure, Anxious-Ambivalent, Avoidant, and Disorganised attachment.
Attachment Theory In Psychology Explained simplypsychology.org Simply Psychology 1 fact
claimTraining materials and policy guidance on attachment theory frequently omit key technical concepts, including John Bowlby’s behavioral systems model, Mary Ainsworth’s framework of sensitivity, and the criteria used to categorize disorganized attachment.