Described as monotropic because he placed great emphasis on a child’s attachment to one particular caregiver
The child’s attachment to this one caregiver is different and more important than others
The more constant and predictable a child’s care, the better the quality of their attachment
Absence of this can have consequences for the child
Social Releasers and Critical Period
Babies are born with a set of innate ‘cute’ behaviours like
smiling and cooing that encourage attention from adults
Activates adult social interaction and so mother and baby are ‘hard-wired’ to become attached
Gradually builds the relationship between baby and caregiver
Bowlby proposed that there is a critical period which is 2.5 years
Internal Working Model
Bowlby proposed that a child forms a mental representation of their relationship with their primary attachment figure
Serves as a model for what relationships are like
Form an expectation that all relationships are as loving and reliable and will bring these qualities to future relationships
The IWM affects the child’s later ability to be a parent themselves
AO3Bowlby: Validity of monotropy is challenged
Schaffer and Emerson found that although most babies did attach to one person at first a minority formed multiple attachments at the same time
The first attachment does appear to have a particularly strong influence on later behaviour this may simply mean it is stronger not necessarily different in quality from the child’s other
attachments
Other attachments to family members provide all the same key qualities
AO3Bowlby: Support for social releasers
Cute baby behaviours are designed to elicit interaction from caregivers
Researchers observed babies triggering interactions with adults using social releasers
The primary attachment figures were told to ignore their babies’ social releasers
Babies who were previously shown to be normally responsive became increasingly distressed and some eventually curled up and lay motionless
This illustrates the role of social releasers in emotional development and suggests that they are important in the process of attachment development
AO3 Bowlby: Support for Internal Working Model
The idea of the internal working model predicts that patterns of attachment will be passed from one generation to the next.
Attachment relationships in 99mothers and their one-year-old babies were assessed
Researchers measured the mothers’ attachment to their own primary attachment figures
The researchers also assessed the attachment quality of the babies
Mothers with poor attachment to their own primary attachment figures were more likely to have poorly attached babies
AO3Bowlby: Feminist Concerns
Bowlby's theory suggests that mothers who work may negatively affect their child’s emotional development
This belief sets up mothers to take the blame for anything that goes wrong for the child in the future
It also gives people an excuse to restrict mothers’ activities such as returning to work.
It may have negative implications for day care and building attachments with someone who is not the mother