animal studies of attachment

Cards (11)

  • outline Lorenz research into imprinting
    randomly divided clutch of goose eggs into 2 conditions:
    1. hatched with mother goose in natural environment
    2. hatched in incubator and first moving object they saw was Lorenz
  • results of Lorenz research into imprinting
    • experimental group followed Lorenz everywhere
    • control group followed mother goose everywhere
    • when the 2 groups were mixed up = control went to mother and experimental went to Lorenz
    • identified a critical period = imprinting needs to take place within a certain time otherwise no attachment is formed
  • define imprinting
    process in birds where they attach to the first thing they see upon hatching
  • outline sexual imprinting case study
    • in a zoo, a peacock hatched in the reptile house
    • first thing it saw were giant tortoises
    • therefore as an adult, it only directed mating towards giant tortoises
  • evaluate Lorenz research into imprinting (STRENGTHS)
    • research support by Regolin and Vallortigara.
    • chicks exposed to a moving shape combination
    • then a range of moving shape combinations moved infront of them
    • found that they followed the original most closely
    • Supports the view that young animals are born with the instinct to imprint during the critical period as Lorenz suggested.
  • evaluate Lorenz research into imprinting (LIMITS)
    lacks ability to generalise to humans = mammalian attachment system is different and more complex
  • outline Harlow research into contact comfort
    • 16 baby monkeys and 2 wire mothers
    • condition 1 = plain wire mother dispensed milk
    • condition 2 = cloth covered, heated wire mother dispensed milk
  • results of Harlow research into contact comfort
    • monkeys cuddled cloth mother more than wire mother regardless of which dispensed milk
    • sought comfort from cloth mother when frightened with a noisy mechanical bear
  • conclusions of Harlow research into contact comfort
    • suggested contact comfort is more important than food in attachment behaviour.
    • when monkeys were frightened with the bear, they were less scared with cloth mother than on their own and willing to explore = secure base behaviour.
    • suggested a critical period of 90 days = after this, it is impossible for attachment to form and damage is irreversible
    • long term effects = Harlow found that in adulthood, monkeys were aggressive and neglectful to their young due to maternal deprivation
  • evaluate Harlow research into contact comfort (STRENGTHS)
    real world applications
    • help social workers understand that lack of attachment is a risk for child development = allows them to intervene and prevent poor outcomes.
    • helps zoos / breeding programmes understand the importance of attachment figures
  • evaluate Harlow research into contact comfort (LIMITS)
    • lacks ability to generalise to humans = human brain and behaviour is more complex
    • ethical issues = long term damage caused to monkeys