22 research outputs found

    Sexuality Through the Lens of Secure Base Attachment Dynamics: Individual Differences in Sexploration

    Get PDF
    A key aspect of attachment functioning is the secure base, which empowers people to explore their environments, though some individuals do this more effectively than others. While most researchers have focused on adult attachment dynamics in terms of stress and threat (safe haven), we argue that concerted attention should also focus on relational processes in times of optimal functioning. In this paper, we introduce a new theoretical concept: secure base sexual exploration (or sexploration). We define this as the degree to which individuals are able to effectively explore multifaceted dimensions of sexuality (e.g., behaviors, identity) as a function of secure attachment dynamics. Put another way, we posit that interpersonal attachment security, which is a function of individual and dyadic factors, may meaningfully predict the degree to which individuals are comfortable with sexual exploration. In the first section of our paper, we outline core tenets of attachment theory, followed by an explanation of the secure base construct. We then explain how the secure base construct can be useful in conceptualizing individual differences in sexploration, followed by domain-specific sexual outcomes (e.g., behavior, identity) that may stem from sexploration. Embedded in this discussion is a new approach for researchers to examine these links

    Judgments of Casual Sex Through a Moral Foundations Theory Perspective

    No full text

    Motivations for Infidelity Revisited: New Factors and Predictors

    No full text

    Moral Judgments of Relationship Betrayals

    No full text

    SPSP 2020 Poster Presentation

    No full text

    Moral Judgment Toward Relationship Betrayals (and Those Who Commit Them)

    No full text

    Pre-registration

    No full text

    Results

    No full text

    Motivations for Infidelity with AM

    No full text
    Ashley Madison sampl

    Replication of Eastwick & Finkel (2008, JPSP)

    No full text
    corecore