Rehabilitation psychology
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Rehabilitation psychology · Feb 2012
Expanding the social communication model of pain: are adult attachment characteristics associated with observers' pain-related evaluations?
Evaluations of another's pain can have important implications in medical, employment, and social settings. Influenced by the Social Communication Model of Pain, this vignette-based study investigated the potential influence of characteristics of the person being evaluated (viz., the coping strategy used by an individual with chronic pain depicted in a vignette) and characteristics of those making evaluations (viz., self-reported attachment anxiety and avoidance of the study participants). The main hypothesis was that participants higher in attachment avoidance would be more critical in their evaluations than those lower in attachment avoidance. ⋯ The current findings suggest that chronic pain patients' coping styles influence evaluations made about them, and that evaluators' gender and attachment characteristics also have important effects on such evaluations.
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On behalf of the new editorial team, let me welcome you to this first issue of Rehabilitation Psychology under our leadership. We are excited and honored by this responsibility. We look forward to serving the readership, authors, and the entire rehabilitation community as we develop and grow the flagship journal of rehabilitation psychology. As part of the editorial transition, I want to take this opportunity to reflect on our history, define our mission, encourage our team, and explore our future. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved).