“…More recently, however, scholars have started to approach attachment from a more dynamic, state‐like perspective, focusing on individual's “at‐the‐moment” attachment expectations and suggesting that attachment expectations are sensitive to context (Fraley, ; Kobak & Bosmans, ) . The first few studies into state attachment variability indicate that expectations of trust in caregiver support are immediately sensitive to experiences of support and conflict with the attachment figure (Bosmans, Van de Walle, Goossens, & Ceulemans, ; Vandevivere, Bosmans, Roels, Dujardin, & Braet, ). As these studies focused on state attachment variability across contexts with different situational characteristics, to date it remains largely unclear (a) whether state attachment fluctuations can also occur across contexts with similar situational characteristics, that is, across a variety of distressing situations, (b) whether state attachment variability has a unidimensional structure (i.e., expectations of overall trust vs. no‐trust in caregiver support) or comprises different components (e.g., expectations about support seeking, expectations about the effectiveness of support), (c) how degree of state attachment variability is associated with more general, trait‐like attachment expectations, and (d) how state attachment variability is associated with psychological well‐being.…”