Up to 3mnths- indiscriminate attachment- the newborn is predisposed to attach to any human. Most babies respond equally to any caregiver
After 4mnths-preference for certain people. Infants learn to distinguishprimary and secondary caregivers but accept care from anyone
After 7mnths- special preference for a single attachment figure- the baby looks to particular people for security, comfort and protection. It shows stranger fear and separation anxiety. Some babies demonstrate these more frequently and intensely than theirs, but they are still seen as evidence of an attachment - usually developed by 1yr
- results indicated that attachments were most likely to form with those who responded appropriately to the baby's signal, not the person they spent the most time with = sensitive responsiveness
- Schaffer and Emerson argue that the most important factor is not who feeds/ changesthe child but who plays and communicates with hem
- Suggested that fathers are secondary attachment figures as the majority of babies became attached to their mother first (around 7mnths)
P- it is difficult to test the asocial stage in particular
E- this is because it is very difficult to gather any meaningful data from infants at this age as they are immobile and have little coordination
E- Some research has suggested that infants ARE social at this age e.g., Meltzoff and Moore found that babies as young as 2 weeks old have the ability to imitate, but this as a subjective interpretation of the babies behaviour.
E- it may be the babies are quite social, it is just very difficult to measure in an objective way
L- therefore the idea of an asocial stage is unfalsifiable
Evaluation of Schaffer and Emerson's stages of attachment
P- There is supporting research evidence for Schaffer's stages of attachment
E- Schaffer and Emmerson found that the babies that they observed demonstrated these patterns of behaviour e.g. After 7 months the babies had a special preference for an attachment figure
E- this adds credibility to the theory as it is empirical evidence for these behaviours
C- However, this study lacks population validity, this is because it was carried out in the 1960s Glasgow and arguably - may not be generalisable as only working-class mothers in 1960s Glasgow therefore there is a culture and gender bias as it is not representative of the whole word Scotland is n individualistic culture doesn't demonstrate attachment behaviour in collectivist cultures/ in fathers
E- this is because it is useful for organisations and people such as social workers to recognise and understand the stages of attachment in babies to identity neglect e.g. a child 9 months and they struggle to form a specificattachment and they would be able to compare the child's age to the behaviour observed
E- therefore this adds credibility to the stages of attachment as they can help ensure that good attachment relationships are formed