The Relationship Styles Questionnaire is a continuum assessment tool for determining adult attachment styles developed by Griffin and Bartholomew (1994). In RSQ, four styles of secure attachment, preoccupation, fear, and denial - distance are identified. With this scale, each person's scores are arranged and graded on two anxiety and avoidance continuum. Thus, each person can Get a score. The anxiety continuum represents the model of oneself and the avoidance continuum represents the model of others. People with a preoccupied and fearful style experience high levels of anxiety, but their responses to this anxiety are different: Distressed people are characterized by seeking support and empathy from others, and frightened people withdraw from others to avoid rejection. There are also high levels of avoidance and different levels of anxiety in people with both fear and denial styles - distance. Fearful people are very sensitive to rejection and lack of interpersonal relationships, while denialists defensively deny the need for others. Participants respond to the way they behave in emotionally close relationships with others, and the scores of each style After averaging the sum of the scores in each subscale are determined.