Cultural variations

    Cards (8)

    • What was Van Ljzendoorn and Kroonenbergs research about?
      • Looked at proportions of secure , insecure-avoidant and insecure-resistant attachment styles across a range of countries to assess cultural variation.
      • Differences within same country to assess variations WITHIN culture
    • What was the procedure of Van Ljzendoorn and Kroonenbergs research into cultural variation?
      • Located 32 studies of attachment using strange situation
      • Conducted in 8 countries for children in 1990
    • What were the results of Van Ljzendoorn and Kroonenbergs study into cultural variation?
      • Secure attachment most common across all countries
      • Insecure resistant : individualistic culture <14%. Collectivist culture (China, Japan) above 25%
      • Variations within country : 150% greater than between countries
      • US: securely attached = 46% vs 90%
    • What was Simonelii et al's study into attachment in Italy?
      • Assessed 76 babies aged 12 months
      • 50% secure, 36% insecure-avoidant, 24% insecure-resistant
      • Cultural changes cause dramatic differences to style of attachment
      • Suggests italy has an individualistic culture
    • What was Jin et al's study into attachment in Korea?
      • Strange situation used to assess 87 babies
      • Proportions of secure and insecure similar to other countries
      • Insecure-resistant more common than insecure-avoidant
      • Collectivist culture
    • What conclusions can be made about cultural variations in attachment?
      • Secure attachment is the norm in wide range of cultures
      • Cultural practices influence attachment style
    • What are two strengths of studies into cultural variation in attachment?
      • Large samples (increases internal validity)
      • Indigenous researchers (most researchers from same country as participants so no language barrier)
    • What are two limitations of studies into cultural variation of attachment?
      • Samples unrepresentative of culture (one sample might over-represent people)
      • Imposed etic (trying to apply a theory designed for one culture to another e.g strange situation designed by American psychologist)
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