| 41. | These studies have also shown that attachment styles developed in infancy can influence behavior later in life.
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| 42. | People with insecure attachment styles often do not have a history of supportive responses from their attachments.
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| 43. | On the one hand, the relationship between attachment styles and desire for less closeness is predictable.
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| 44. | People who have fearful avoidant and anxious preoccupied attachment styles typically want greater closeness with their partners.
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| 45. | The Relationship Questionnaire assess attachment style by crossing the positive or negative view of self and partner.
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| 46. | The attachment style of individuals has a strong influence on the way future relationships are created and harnessed.
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| 47. | The secure and anxious attachment styles are associated with higher sociability than the dismissive or fearful attachment styles.
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| 48. | The secure and anxious attachment styles are associated with higher sociability than the dismissive or fearful attachment styles.
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| 49. | People with anxious preoccupied attachment styles often find themselves in long-lasting, but unhappy, relationships.
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| 50. | The most common approach to defining attachment style is a two-dimension approach in defining attachment style.
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