cultural variations

Cards (26)

  • as attachment is innate, due to genetics, it is universal meaning experienced by infants in all cultures
  • cross cultural variations
    ways that different groups of people vary, in terms of their social practices which affect development and behaviour
  • individualist countries
    people view themselves as individuals and emphasise the need of individuals
  • similarities across cultures
    • develop attachments to one pcg (tronick et al)
    • fox's kibbutz - maternal sensitivity is apparent
    • children use adult as a secure base to explore
  • collectivist countries
    people view themselves as members of groups and consider the nedds of the group
  • collectivist cultures may make multiple attachments, as they are used to having many carers
  • van ijzendoorn and kroonenberg (1988)
    meta-analysis combining findings of 32 strange situation studies from across the world, based on observation of over 2000 children
  • meta-analysis
    researcher looks at findings from a number of different studies in order to reach general conclusion about a particular hypothesis
  • inter variations
    between countries
  • intra variations
    within the same country
  • highest % avoidant
    Germany - 35.3%
    this shows that individualist cultures are more avoidant (western)
  • highest % resistant
    Israel and Japan - 28.8% and 27.1%
    this shows that collectivist cultures are more resistant (eastern)
  • 8 countries with 32 studies
  • global pattern across cultures appears to be similar to USA
    • secure attachment is the most common across all cultures (the 'norm')
    • supports the idea that secure attachment is ideal for healthy social and emotional development
    • attachment is therefore innate and a biological process, which relates to bowlby evolutionary theory
  • van ijzendoorn and kroonenberg (1988)findings

    • secure most common type of attachment
    • highest avoidant - germany 35.3%
    • highest resistant - israel 28.8%, japan 27.1%
  • insecure attachments vary across different cultures
    • high levels of insecure avoidant in individualist cultures
    • high levels of insecure resistant in collectivist cultures
    • suggests the type of attachment may be influenced by culture or the assessment tool may be biased (imposed etic)
  • high levels of intravariation
    • 1.5 x greater variation within a culture than between cultures
    • tokyo sample was more similar to two US samples (new york) than the other japan sample
    • israeli city was closer to US sample than israeli kibbutzim sample
    • there can be a large difference between rural and urban environments, meaning we should be cautious when assuming an individual sample is representative of a particular culture
  • Jin 2012 Korea
    • similar levels of distribution of attachment in japan and korea
    • both countries had high levels of insecure resistant babies and low levels of insecure avoidant
    • as they have similar rearing styles, it can be concluded that results support that rearing styles affect attachment types
  • meta-analysis is ethically sound
    no new data collection (analysis of secondary data), means that no more children are put through potentially traumatic procedure
  • applications that help understand child rearing practices in different cultures
    • first large scale comparative analysis of attachment studies in different countries
    • understand how child rearing affects attachment type
  • used research from indigenous researchers which enhances the validity of research
  • may not be truly representative
    • china had 1 study
    • USA had 18 studies
    means may not generalise to country at large
  • the use of the strange situation
    • as the procedure is ethnocentric, developed using american norms, it may only be applicable to western children
    • using to assess attachment of non-western children could arguable be inappropriate as doesn't account for culturally specific elements
    • when used on non-western cultures, it is imposed etic
  • researchers would classify more germans as resistant, but they are just distant as a culture
  • secure was globally preffered whihc could suggest it has a biological basis
  • differences in cultures rearing styles
    • german - encourages non-clingy behaviour, so children are classified as avoidal
    • japan - mothers spend significant time with infants, explaining extreme resistant reactions to seperation