Cards (16)

    • What evidence did William Goldfarb provide regarding maternal deprivation and IQ?
      He found lower IQ in children who remained in institutions compared to those who were fostered.
    • What was the focus of Bowlby's (1944) 44 thieves study?
      The link between affectionless psychopathy and maternal deprivation
    • What was the sample size of Bowlby's 44 thieves study?
      44 criminal teenagers
    • What were the characteristics of affectionless psychopathy as identified in the study?
      Lack of affection, lack of guilt, and lack of empathy
    • How were the families of the 'thieves' involved in the study?
      They were interviewed to establish early separations from their mothers
    • What was the control group in Bowlby's study?
      44 non-criminal but emotionally-disturbed young people
    • What did Bowlby find regarding the number of affectionless psychopaths among the thieves?
      14 of the 44 thieves were affectionless psychopaths
    • How many of the affectionless psychopaths had experienced prolonged separation from their mothers?
      12 out of 14 affectionless psychopaths
    • What was the comparison of separations experienced by the remaining thieves?
      Only five of the remaining 30 thieves had experienced separations
    • How many participants in the control group experienced long separations?
      Two participants
    • What conclusion did Bowlby draw from his 44 thieves study?
      Prolonged early separation/deprivation caused affectionless psychopathy
    • Bowlby's 44 thieves study supported his theory of maternal deprivation
    • Bowlby's 44 thieves study is a correlational study (limitation)
      • not a controlled experiment, as its not possible
      • causation can't be established
      • factors such as socio-economic status, family criminal history, or inherited mental health conditions could have influenced the likelihood of maternal deprivation in infancy and later offending by the children
    • Strength - Bowlby's work on attachment has social impacts
      • influencing public policy and social welfare systems
      • e.g. hospitals altered policies for hospitalised children to allow for a consistent caregiver presence
    • Counterpoint - Bowlby's work on attachment impacts on economy
      • nurseries are more expensive
      • focus on maternity rather than paternity leave may have resulted in an increase in the gender pay gap
    • Limitation - criticisms of gender bias
      • focus on the mother as the primary caregiver potentially downplays the contribution fathers and other caregivers can make in a child's emotional development (alpha bias)
      • Schaffer et al. have found 87% of infants can form multiple strong attachments at 18 months
      • Other research indicates important roles for the father in early attachment such as encouraging risk taking, developing socialisation and the sensitive responsive role