Attachments Style Questionnaire (ASQ) Short Form: Difference between revisions

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<blockquote class="definition">The Attachments Style Questionnaire (ASQ) Short-Form<ref>Chui, Wing-Yip, and Man-Tak Leung. “Adult Attachment Internal Working Model of Self and Other in Chinese Culture: Measured by the Attachment Style Questionnaire — Short Form (ASQ-SF) by Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and Item Response Theory (IRT).” ''Personality and Individual Differences'' 96 (July 1, 2016): 55–64. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2016.02.068</nowiki>.</ref> is a short version of the original ASQ.<ref>Feeney, J. A., Noller, P., & Hanrahan, M. (1994). Assessing adult attachment: Developments in the conceptualization of security and insecurity. In M. B. Sperling & W. H. Berman (Eds.), Attachment in adults: Clinical and developmental perspectives (p. 128–152). Guilford Press.</ref>
<blockquote class="definition">The Attachments Style Questionnaire (ASQ) Short-Form<ref>Chui, Wing-Yip, and Man-Tak Leung. “Adult Attachment Internal Working Model of Self and Other in Chinese Culture: Measured by the Attachment Style Questionnaire — Short Form (ASQ-SF) by Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and Item Response Theory (IRT).” ''Personality and Individual Differences'' 96 (July 1, 2016): 55–64. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2016.02.068</nowiki>.</ref> is a short version of the original ASQ.<ref>Feeney, J. A., Noller, P., & Hanrahan, M. (1994). Assessing adult attachment: Developments in the conceptualization of security and insecurity. In M. B. Sperling & W. H. Berman (Eds.), Attachment in adults: Clinical and developmental perspectives (p. 128–152). Guilford Press.</ref>
</blockquote>
==List of LP Assessments==
[[LP Assessments]] > {{#ask:[[Is an::LP Assessment]]}}


</blockquote>
== Notes ==
== Notes ==


===The ASQ===


'''Secure'''
'''Secure'''
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* 8. I like to be self-sufficient.
* 8. I like to be self-sufficient.
* 9. I don't worry about being alone: I don't need other people that strongly.
* 9. I don't worry about being alone: I don't need other people that strongly.
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{{lp200}}
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[[Is an::LP Assessment| ]]

Latest revision as of 14:39, 12 Haziran 2023

The Attachments Style Questionnaire (ASQ) Short-Form[1] is a short version of the original ASQ.[2]

List of LP Assessments

LP Assessments > Attachments Style Questionnaire (ASQ) Short Form

Notes

The ASQ

Secure

  • 8. I trust other people and I like it when other people can rely on me.
  • 9. I feel at ease in intimate relationships
  • 10. I think it is important that people can rely on each other.

Fearful-avoidant

  • 6. I would like to be open to others, but I feel I can't trust other people.
  • 7. I would like to have close relationships with other people, but I find it difficult to fully trust them.
  • 8. I'm afraid that my hopes will be deceived when I get too closely related to others.
  • 9.I am wary to get engaged in close relationships because I'm afraid to get hurt.
  • 10. I feel uncomfortable when relationships with other people become close.

Preoccupied

  • 8. I often wonder whether people like me.
  • 9. I am often afraid that other people don't like me.
  • 10. I don't worry whether people like me or not.

Dismissing

  • 6. It is important to me to be independent.
  • 7. I prefer that others are independent of me, and that I am independent of others.
  • 8. I like to be self-sufficient.
  • 9. I don't worry about being alone: I don't need other people that strongly.

Related LP Content and Courses

Template:Lp200

Footnotes

  1. Chui, Wing-Yip, and Man-Tak Leung. “Adult Attachment Internal Working Model of Self and Other in Chinese Culture: Measured by the Attachment Style Questionnaire — Short Form (ASQ-SF) by Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and Item Response Theory (IRT).” Personality and Individual Differences 96 (July 1, 2016): 55–64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2016.02.068.
  2. Feeney, J. A., Noller, P., & Hanrahan, M. (1994). Assessing adult attachment: Developments in the conceptualization of security and insecurity. In M. B. Sperling & W. H. Berman (Eds.), Attachment in adults: Clinical and developmental perspectives (p. 128–152). Guilford Press.