Baby’s behaviour towards people and inanimate objects is quite similar
Some preference for familiar people (more easily calmed by them)
Babies are also happier in the presence of other people
stage 2 = indiscriminate attachment (2-7 months)
Babies now display more observable social behaviour with a preference for people rather than inanimate objects
They recognise and prefer familiar people
Babies do not show stranger or separation anxiety
Attachment is indiscriminate because its the same towards all
stage 3 = specific attachment (from ~7 months)
Stranger anxiety and separation anxiety when separated from one particular person
Baby is said to have formed a specific attachment with the primary attachment figure
This is in most cases the person who offers the most interaction and responds to the baby’s ‘signals’ with the most skill (the mother in 65% of cases)
stage 4 = multiple attachments (by one year)
Secondary attachments with other adults form shortly after
Schaffer and Emerson’s study = 29% of babies had secondary (multiple) attachments within a month of forming a primary (specific) attachment
By the age of one year = the majority of infants had multiple secondary attachments
Schaffer and Emerson, stages of attachment study (procedure)
60 babies from Glasgow (most from working-class families)
Researchers visited babies and mothers at home every month for a year and again at 18 months
Separation anxiety = measured by asking mothers about their children’s behaviour during everyday separations (eg adult leaving the room)
Stranger anxiety = measured by asking mothers questions about their children's anxiety response to unfamiliar adults
Schaffer and Emerson, stages of attachment study (findings/conclusions)
Babies developed attachments throughout a sequence of stages - from asocial through to a specific attachment to multiple attachments
The specific attachment tended to be the person who was most interactive and sensitives to babies‘ signals and facial expressions (ie reciprocity)
This was not necessarily the person the baby spent most time with
strength = S+E study has external validity
Most of the observations (not stranger anxiety) were made by parents during ordinary activities and reported to researchers
The alternative would be to have observers present in the babies‘ homes - this may have distracted the babies or made them feel more anxious
This means it is highly likely that participants behaved naturally while being observed
counterpoint to study having external validity
mothers may have been biased in what they reported
Eg = they might not have noticed their baby was showing signs of anxiety or may have misremembered it
Means that even if babies behaved naturally, their behaviour mat not have been accurately recorded
limitation = poor evidence for the asocial stage
Because of their stage of physical development, young babies have poor coordination and are fairly immobile
This makes it difficult for mothers to accurately report signs of anxiety and attachment for this age group
Means the babies might actually be quite social but, because of flawed methods, they appear to be asocial
strength = RWA to day care
In early stages (asocial and indiscriminate attachments) babies can be comforted by any skilled adult
but if a child starts day care later (during the stage of specific attachments) care from an unfamiliar adult may cause distress and longer-term problems
Means that S+E stages can help parents making day care decisions
extra evaluation = generalisability
S+E based their stages on a single but large-scale study of babies‘ development conducted in working-class Glasgow
BUT = child-rearing practices vary considerably according to cultural and historical context
eg = van ijzendoorn = multiple attachments the norm in collectivist cultures
Means that some of the observations from this study may not generalise to other populations