Attachment-specific speech patterns induce dysphoric mood changes in the listener as a function of individual differences in attachment characteristics and psychopathology.
Anna Linda LeutritzLejla ColicViola BorchardtXuemei ChengBin ZhangSarah LisonJörg FrommerAnna BuchheimBernhard StraussPeter FonagyTobias NolteMartin WalterPublished in: Psychology and psychotherapy (2019)
In clinical populations, insecure-preoccupied attachment has a high prevalence. In this study, listening to a narrative characteristic of insecure-preoccupied speech patterns resulted in reduced well-being in healthy listeners. Patients with depressive symptoms showed a higher emotional reactivity towards the insecure-preoccupied narrative compared to healthy controls. While working on (childhood) traumata, for example, in group therapy or inpatient settings, therapists should raise awareness to possible mood changes through discourse-conveyed attachment characteristics in listeners as a 'side effect'.