A deep and enduring emotional bond that connects one person to another across the time and space.
How do babies communicate?
Crying = want attention
Eyecontact
Lips moving = hungry
Laughing/smiling
Grasping/grabbing/reaching
The more interactions between caregivers and infants, the stronger the attachment
What are the 2 types of caregiver-infant interactions?
Reciprocity
Interactional synchrony
What is Reciprocity?
2-way interaction between infants and caregivers, where actions are reciprocated by taking turns.
Babies will have alert phases (ready for interaction) - more common at 3 months.
2/3 of the time, mothers will respond to alert phases
More about reciprocity:
Tronick’sstill face experiment (1972) found babies to be very distressed when they didn’t get any attention from their mothers
Brezeltonet al (2007) describe the interaction as a dance (respond to each other’s movements)
Feldman (2007) found reciprocity increases from 3 months old as they pay increasing attention to each other’s verbal/facial communication (sensitive responsiveness will lay the strong foundations for attachment to develop
What is Interactional synchrony?
Caregiver and infant reflect each other's actions and emotions at a similar time.
Meltzoff and Moore's interactional synchrony experiment (1977) found the babies copied their caregiver when there was no barrier (the dummy). They concluded the interactional synchrony was innate.
Isabella et al (1989) found that the mothers and infants that had higher levels of interactional synchrony had a higher quality of attachment.
What is a strength if caregiver-infant interactions?
Research support
Meltzoff and Moore (1977) - interactional synchrony was innate
Isabelle et al (1989) - connection found between interactional synchrony and high-quality attachment
What is a counter argument of 'research method' to that if caregiver-infant interactions?
Feldman (2012) points out synchrony and reciprocity only describes behaviours that happen at the same time – doesn't tell us the purpose
What is a strength if caregiver-infant interactions?
Controlled observation = easily replicable as EV’s are less common
What is a limitation if caregiver-infant interactions?
Controlled observation = not generalisable
Not readily available to be applied to everyday life and potentially more demand characteristics (participants aren’t in their natural environment)
What is a limitation if caregiver-infant interactions?
Testability issues with investigating children
Infants move a lot, which causes issues working out what behaviour is intentional
What is a limitation if caregiver-infant interactions?
Mothers may cause unreliable results
Mays may lie about the presence of separation anxiety due to embarrassment, meaning the results may not be 100% valid