Kaya, YasarUnal, SuheylaOzdemir, SerdalErenkus, Zehra2024-08-042024-08-0420141304-02432458-8245https://hdl.handle.net/11616/104577This study, carried out in Malatya province among 296 student samples aged between 20- 24, aims to reveal the effects of psychological and cultural factors on attachment hierarchy in young adulthood. The persons placed closest to the Me nucleus are the mother (76.4%), father (43.6%), sibling (36.5%) and friend (20.9%) respectively. Among those with a romantic partner, 31.9% place the romantic partner in the first circle. The avoidance levels of young females are statistically significantly higher than young males (chi(2) = 21.083 p=0.000). A separated family during childhood statistically significantly increase the attachment anxiety level (chi(2) = 10.078 p=0.002). The circle value the romantic partner is placed in and the numbers of friends in the social atom are significantly smaller in subjects with a high avoidance level. Increased attachment avoidance levels result in decreased number of persons in the first circle, thus, reducing significantly both placing friends in the first circle and having a romantic partner. The Social Atom Volume and avoidance of attachment, as our study demonstrate, are factors that influence having a romantic partner.trinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessAttachment dimensionsSocial atomYoung adultClose relationshipsAttachment hierarchyTHE SOCIAL NETWORK HIERARCHY IN YOUNG ADULTHOOD: A RESEARCH TROUGH UNIVERSITY STUDENTS SAMPLES IN MALATYA, TURKEY WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF SOCIAL ATOM THEORYArticle501945WOS:000409793600002N/A