Schaffers stages of attachment

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    Cards (11)

    • Stages of attachment development - Asocial
      > The infant’s behaviour towards non-human objects and humans is quite similar.
      > However, infants are happier when in the presence of other humans.
    • Stages of attachment development - Indiscriminate
      > 2-7 months
      > They show a preference for people over inanimate objects and recognise and prefer familiar adults.
      > Infants will usually accept cuddles and comfort from any adult, they usually do not show separation or stranger anxiety.
       
    • Stages of attachment development - Specific
      > From around 7 months infants start to show stranger and separation anxiety when separated from a particular adult
      > This is a specific attachment and is not necessarily the person the child spends most time with, but the one who offers the most interaction and responds to the infants ‘signals’ the most.
       
    • Stages of attachment development - Multiple
      > Shortly after children show specific attachments, they usually extend this attachment behaviour to other adults whom they regularly spend time with.
      > In Schaffer and Emerson’s study, 29% of children had multiple attachments within a month of forming a specific attachment.
      > By the age of one year, the majority of infants have developed multiple attachments.
      > At 18 months, 75% of infants had an attachment with their father.
    • Stages of attachment AO3
      :) High ecological validity
      > Observations carried out in the participants own homes
      > Making it easier to generalise the findings to real life examples of attachment - more likely to represent everyday interactions
      > Increasing the external validity of the research into stages of attachment
    • Stages of attachment AO3
      :( Social desirability bias
      > As interviews were used to gather the information
      > Therefore parents may have lied to present themselves in the best possible light
      > So the results may have lacked internal validity and not measure the true stages of attachment
    • Stages of attachment AO3
      :( Culture bias
      > The sample used were all from Glasgow
      > Therefore it is difficult to generalise the findings of the stages of attachment to other cultures
      > For example, psychologists studying non-western cultures where families often work together to look after a child have found infants can form multiple attachments without forming a specific attachment first
      > Limiting the external validity of the research into stages of attachment
    • Stages of attachment AO3
      :) Longitudinal study
      > Same children were observed regularly
      > No confounding variable of individual differences between the children
      > Increasing the internal validity of the research into stages of attachment