This study on children with a Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD; N = 32), children
with developmental language disorder (N = 22), and normally developing children (N = 28)
sought to answer questions concerning attachment and autistic behaviour. We could
replicate the finding that children with a PDD are able to develop secure attachment
relationships to their primary caregiver. Children with PDD who had an insecure attachment
showed fewer social initiatives and responses than children with PDD who had a secure
attachment, even when the insecurely and securely attached PDD children were matched on
chronological and mental age. Children with both a PDD and mental retardation were more
often classified as disorganised.
Three findings suggested that a disorganised attachment does not merely reflect the
presence of “autistic” behaviour: (1) children with PDD did not reveal higher rates of a
disorganised attachment than matched comparison children; (2) having a PDD diagnosis
and having a disorganised attachment were found to be associated with opposite effects on
an ethological measure of level of behavioural organisation; and (3) a disorganised
attachment but not a PDD diagnosis was associated with an increase in heart rate during
parting with the caregiver and a decrease in heart rate during reunion.