types of attachment

Cards (12)

  • Ainsworth and Bell, the strange situation
    • Ainsworth and Bell = developed the strange situation as a method to assess the quality of a baby’s attachment to a caregiver
    • It is a controlled observation procedure in a lab (a controlled environment) with a two-way mirror through which psychologists can observe a baby’s behaviour
  • Ainsworth and Bell, the strange situation (procedure)
    • 5 categories used to judge attachment quality:
    • Proximity-seeking = well-attached babies stay close to caregiver
    • Exploration and secure-base behaviour = good attachment makes a baby confident to explore, using the caregiver as a point of safety
    • Stranger anxiety = displayed by well-attached babies
    • Separation anxiety = displayed by well-attached babies
    • Response to reunion with the caregiver after separation for a short period of time = well-attached babies are enthusiastic
  • Ainsworth and Bell, the strange situation (procedure) pt 2
    • The procedure has 7 ‘episodes’, each lasting 3 minutes:
    • Baby is encouraged to explore by caregiver
    • Stranger enters and talks to caregiver, approaches baby
    • Caregiver leaves
    • Caregiver returns, stranger leaves
    • Caregiver leaves baby alone
    • Stranger returns
    • Caregiver returns
  • Ainsworth and Bell, the strange situation (findings/conclusions)
    • Ainsworth and Bell found distinct patterns in the way babies behaved
    • They identified 3 main types:
    • Secure attachment
    • Insecure-avoidant attachment
    • Insecure-resistant attachment
  • secure attachment
    • Type B
    • 60-75% of British toddlers
    • Baby happy to explore but seeks proximity to caregiver (secure base)
    • Shows moderate separation anxiety and stranger anxiety
    • Requires and accepts comfort from caregiver on reunion
  • insecure-avoidant attachment
    • Type A
    • 20-25% of British toddlers
    • Baby explores freely but does not seek proximity (no secure base)
    • Shows little/ no separation and stranger anxiety
    • Avoids contact at the reunion stage
  • insecure-resistant attachment
    • Type C
    • 3% of British toddlers
    • Baby explores less and seeks greater proximity
    • Shows considerable stranger and separation anxiety
    • Resists comfort when reunited with caregiver
  • strength = the strange situation has good predictive validity
    • Attachment type predicts later development
    • Eg = secure babies typically have greater success at school
    • In contrast, insecure-resistant attachment is associated with the worst outcomes
    • Eg = bullying and adult mental health problems
    • This is evidence for the validity of the concept because it can explain (predict) future outcomes
  • counterpoint to having good predictive validity
    • Although the strange situation measures something that predicts later development - it may be measuring genetic differences in anxiety
    • Means the strange situation may not actually measure attachment
  • strength = strange situation has good inter-rater reliability
    • Different observers watching the same babies generally agree on attachment type
    • Eg = Bick et al = found 94% agreement in one team
    • This may be because the strange situation takes place under controlled conditions and because the behavioural categories are easy to observe
    • Means that we can be confident that the attachment type of a baby identified in the strange situation does not depend on who is observing them
  • limitation = the strange situation may be a culture-bound test
    • The strange situation test might not have the same meaning in countries outside europe and the US where it was created
    • Cultural differences in children’s experiences mean they respond differently
    • Eg = Japanese babies show anxiety because they are not used to being left caregiver
    • This means it is difficult to know what the strange situation is measuring in some countries/cultures
  • extra evaluation = other attachment types
    • Main and Solomon = identified a 4th category of attachment:
    • disorganised (type D) = a mix of resistant and avoidant behaviours
    • BUT = type D babies are unusual and have generally experienced some form of severe neglect or abuse - associated with late psychological disorders
    • Means that Ainsworth‘s classification is adequate as a description of normal variations in attachment