What was van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg (1988)'s research?
Conducted a meta-analysis combining the findings of 32 replications of the Strange Situation in a variety of countries, based on the observations of over 2000 children
Secure attachment was the most common classification in all countries, but proportions varied from Britain's 75% to China's 50%
Individualist cultures had low rates of resistant attachment (under 14%), but collectivist cultures had rates of above 25% like China and Israel
What explains cross cultural differences in Israel?
Due to being raised in a Kibbutz Israeli children are used to being separated from their mother explaining low separation anxiety
Not used to strangers explains high stranger anxiety
Explains high percentage of resistant behaviour due to different child-rearing practices rather than poor quality of attachment
What explains cross cultural differences in Germany?
Grossmann et al: German parents promote a lot of independence and non-clingy children
Explains a high percentage of avoidant behaviour which is not due to poor quality of attachment but cultural values
What did Simonella et al. find about attachment in Italy?
Assessed 76 babies using Strange Situation
50% were secure, 36% were avoidant
Higher rates of avoidant babies also being found in other countries may be due to increasing numbers of mothers in work and using professional childcare
Suggests patterns of attachment type vary in line with cultural change but are not static
What is one strength of research on cultural variations in attachment?
Most were conducted by indigenous researches who are from the same cultural background as the participants - an example of emic research e.g. Grossmann et al. in Germany and Takahashi in Japan
Avoids problems of cross-cultural research like language barriers and biases from national stereotypes
Enhances the validity of data
How do confounding variables weaken research on cultural variations in attachment?
Studies conducted in different countries are usually not matched for methodology when meta-analysed
Sample characteristics like social background and urban/rural makeup can confound the results, showing a lack of standardisation
Even things like environmental characteristics could confound results (size of the room, availability of interesting toys)
Means the meta-analysis may not be telling us about cross-cultural differences but extraneous differences
How is the design of the Strange Situation weak?
Imposed etic: assuming an idea/technique that works in one culture may work in another
In Britain and the US, lack of affection during reunion may be seen as an avoidant attachment whereas in Germany this could just be interpreted as independence not insecure attachment
Behaviours may not have different meanings in different cultural contexts, so using the same test is meaningless