cultural variations

Cards (22)

  • Who conducted the study on attachment types in 1988?
    Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg
  • What was the main aim of Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
    To assess cultural variation in attachment types
  • What was the procedure of the study conducted by Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg?
    • Located 32 studies using the Strange Situation
    • Investigated proportions of attachment types
    • Conducted in 8 countries, 15 in the US
    • Analyzed data from 1990 children
  • How many studies were located in Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg's research?
    32 studies
  • How many children were included in the meta-analysis of the studies?
    1990 children
  • What was the most common attachment type found in all countries?
    Secure attachment
  • What percentage of secure attachment was found in Britain?
    75%
  • What percentage of secure attachment was found in China?
    50%
  • How did insecure resistant attachment rates in individualist cultures compare to Ainsworth's original sample?
    They were similar, all under 14%
  • What were the rates of insecure resistant attachment in collectivist cultures?
    Above 25% in China, Japan, and Israel
  • How much greater were variations within the same country compared to those between countries?
    150% greater
  • What were the findings of the Italian study conducted by Simonelli et al.?
    • Sample: 76 babies aged 12 months
    • 50% securely attached
    • 36% insecure avoidant
    • Lower secure attachment, higher avoidant attachment
    • Due to mothers working long hours and using childcare
  • What conclusion was drawn from the Italian study regarding attachment types?
    Patterns of attachment vary with cultural change
  • What were the findings of the Korean study conducted by Kyoung Jin et al.?
    • Sample: 87 babies
    • Proportions of secure and insecure babies similar to most countries
    • Most babies were secure
    • More insecurely attached were resistant, only one avoidant
  • How does the distribution of attachment types in Korea compare to Japan?
    Similar distribution of attachment types
  • What conclusions can be drawn about secure attachment from the studies?
    • Secure attachment is the norm in many cultures
    • Supports Bowlby's idea that attachment is innate
    • Cultural practices influence attachment type
  • What is a strength of the studies conducted by indigenous psychologists?
    • Avoids misunderstandings in communication
    • Reduces bias from cultural stereotypes
    • Enhances validity of data collected
  • What is a counterpoint regarding cross-cultural attachment research?
    Not all research was done by indigenous psychologists
  • What limitation is associated with cross-cultural research findings?
    • Impacted by confounding variables
    • Methodology often not matched across studies
    • Sample characteristics can confound results
    • Environmental variables may differ
  • How can environmental variables affect attachment behavior in studies?
    They may confound results, affecting classifications
  • Why might a child be classified as avoidant in a study?
    Due to less visible proximity seeking from room size
  • What issues arise from non-matched studies in cross-cultural research?
    • May not accurately reflect cross-cultural patterns
    • Confounding variables can skew results
    • Difficult to draw valid conclusions