Bowlby -Explanations

Cards (13)

  • What is attachment in this explanation?
    Attachment is adaptive and innate – Attachment is a
    behavioural system that has evolved because of its
    survival value.
  • Detail on attachment being adaptive and innate:
    • Innate drive to be attached = long term benefits
    • Attachment / imprinting ensures protection and food
    • Behaviour is adaptive = if attachment increases, survival and reproductive chances increase
  • Monotropic:
    • Places high value on a unique ‘monotropic’ relationship with mother-figure
    • This is more important than any other attachment
    • Doesn’t have to be biological mother
    • The more time spent with the primary care giver the better.
    • Law of continuity
    • Law of accumulated separation
    • This person acts as a secure base –child can explore the world and have a safe haven to return too.
  • Monotropy - continuity + accumulated separation
    • Law of continuity = the more constant and predictable a child's care, the better the quality of their attachment
    • Law of accumulated separation= the effect of every separation from the mother add up and the safest dose is therefore a zero dose.
  • Social releasers:
    • Babies are born with a set of innate Social releasers
    • These facilitate bonding = like smiling, cooing, crying and gripping that engage adult attention
    • This is so the adult will feed and protect them (help survival)
    • Reciprocal process- both mother and baby have an innate desire to become attached and the social releasers trigger the caregiver response
    • Links to Interactional Synchrony
  • Critical period
    • Critical /sensitive period around 2 years old when the infant attachment system is active.
    • This is a period where a child is very sensitive
    • If no attachment is formed in this time period, a child will find it very difficult to form one later on.
  • Internal working model - blueprint
    • A child develops an internal working model
    • This is a blueprint for future relationships starts as a relationship between caregiver and infant
    • Through this relationship - develop a model about future emotional relationships
    • Model as it because it acts as a model from what to expect in future relationships.
  • Internal working model - what does the blueprint shows about future relationships?
    • A child that has poor treatment will tend to form further poor relationships as they expect such treatment from others / to treat others in that way.
    • Impacts on how the child will also parent. Parents
    • Base their parenting behaviour on their own experience of being parented.
    • This is why those from functional families go on to have functional families and vice versa
  • AO3- lacks validity
    • Relationship with the primary attachment figure might be stronger than other attachments rather than different in quality
    • Other family members may develop attachments
    • These may have the same qualities, such as comfort and a secure base
    • This means that Bowlby may have been wrong to suggest that there is a unique quality to a child’s primary attachment figure
  • AO3 strength - social releasers:
    • Brazelton et al (1975)- primary attachment figures told to ignore their babies’ social releasers
    • Babies (who were previously shown to be normally responsive) initially showed some distress
    • Eventually some curled up and laid motionless
    • Supports the idea that social releasers play an important role in attachment development
  • AO3 strength- internal working model
    • Model predicts that patterns of attachment are passed from one generation to the next
    • Bailey etl al (2007)- 99 mothers - Those with poor attachment to their own parents were more likely to have one-year-olds who were poorly attached
    • This supports the idea of an internal working model (attachment is passed through families)
  • Weakness - internal working model
    • there are other influences on social development which aren't taken into account
    • E.g. Genetically influenced personality
    • Suggests bowlby overemphasised the importance of this model in attachment
  • Weakness - role of the father
    Bowlby underestimated the role of the father - saw him as primarily economic