Cultural variations

Cards (13)

  • Individualistic culture
    • western cultures
    • Value independence and individuality
  • Collectivist culture
    • e.g. Japan and China
    • Value interdependence - dependant on each other
    • Importance of the group
    • Extent to which things are shared - groups live together, share tasks, childrearing and belongings
  • Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg (1988) meta-analysis
    • examined 32 studies in 8 countries where the strange situation had been used
    • Had data from around 2000 children
    • Results combined from the studies but were weighted for sample size
  • Findings :
    • In all countries - secure attachment was the most common classification
    • However - it varied (75% in Britain, 50% in China).
    • Insecure-Resistant was the least common
    • Avoidant attachment was more common in West Germany but rare in Israel and Japan.
    • Variation within cultures was 1.5x greater than the variation between cultures
    • E.g. in USA one study found 46% securely attached, another found 90%
  • Conclusion:
    • The global pattern across cultures appears to be similar to what was found in the US.
    • Supports the idea that secure attachment is best for healthy (social and emotional) development.
    • Cross cultural similarities support the view that attachment is an innate and biological process.
  • Cross Cultural similarities :
    • Tronick et al
    • Africa
    • Studied an African tribe
    • Infants looked after and breastfed by different women but slept with their own mother
    • Infants still showed one primary attachment
  • Cross cultural differences - Grossman
    • Grossmann and Grossmann (1991)
    • Germany
    • German infants classified as insecurely attached.
    • German culture involves keeping interpersonal distance.
    • Infants do not engage in proximity seeking behaviour in Strange Situation – therefore labelled insecurely attached.
    • This is because they are encouraged to act independently
  • Cross cultural differences - Takshashi
    • Japan
    • Found similar rates of secure attachment in Japanese infants to US infants
    • Japanese infants showed no evidence of insecure-avoidant attachment
    • High rates of insecure-resistant attachment
    • Infants distressed being left alone (for 90% of infants the study had to be stopped).
    • Explained by different childcare practice – in japan infants rarely experience separation from their mother
    • Therefore appear insecurely attached in the Strange Situation.
  • Conclusions
    • Studies suggest despite the fact that there are cultural variations in infant care, attachments are still formed with the infants mother.
    • Research shows that there are differences in the patterns of attachment
    • These can be related to differences in cultural attitudes and child rearing.
  • Strength - use of indigenous researchers
    • indigenous researchers are from the same cultural background as the ppts
    • This helps communication between researchers and participants and helps prevent misunderstandings e.g. of instructions
    • Removes language barriers
    • This means that there is a good chance that researchers and participants communicated successfully
    • This increasing the validity of the study
  • Counter point of indigenous researchers AO3:
    • The use of these researchers isn’t true for all of the research
    • E.g. Americans Morelli and Tronick investigated the Efe in Zaire
    • This means that some cross cultural research may have communication errors hence lacks validity
  • Weakness - confounding variables
    • Studies conducted in different countries may not be matched for sample characteristics
    • e.g. may use children of different ages and social classes
    • Environmental variables - may differ
    • e.g. using smaller rooms which might encourage babies to explore more
    • This means that studies assessing attachment types carried out in different countries may tell us little about cultural differences in attachment
  • Weakness - imposed etic
    • Using a test (the Strange Situation) in a different cultural context from the one it was designed for (America) may be meaningless
    • Strange Situation was designed in the USA where lack of affection at reunion represents insecure attachment.
    • However- in Germany it would be seen as a sign of independence, which is desired.
    • This means that sit may be meaningless to compare attachment behaviours across countries
    • This is known as imposed etic