Problem:
How can I make notes with bullet points in this paragraph?
Stability and Change in Attachment Over Time Initially, a number of smaller scale longitudinal studies were conducted to track children's attachments over time. In a study in Germany, for example, attachment classifications at age 1 year predicted 90 percent of secure attachments and 75 percent of insecure classifications at age 6 (Wartner et al., 1994). Even across longer intervals, stability of attachment has been observed. Waters and his colleagues (2000) found that 72 percent of the children in their sample who were classified as secure in infancy were secure 20 years later-an impressive level of stability across a long period. And indeed an early meta-analysis of attachment stability from infancy to adulthood yielded a moderately high association equivalent to a correlation of about +0.40 (Fraley, 2002). Recently, however, evidence from larger studies has suggested, in both higher-risk and normative-risks samples, that infant attachment on its own is only weakly associated with attachment in early adulthood-though these same studies show that the observed quality of early maternal and paternal caregiving is a relatively robust predictor of security in adulthood, as expected by attachment theory (Groh et al., 2014; Haydon et al., 2014; Raby et al., 2013). Need Assignment Help?