Harlow

    Cards (7)

    • Harlow
      > Aim - To investigate whether food or comfort is more important in the formation of attachments
      > Method - Lab experiment
    • Harlow
      Procedure
      > 16 baby rhesus monkeys were separated from their mothers at birth and brought up in cages.
      >The cages contained surrogate mothers – A wire mother with milk (provided food) and a cloth mother without milk (provided comfort).
      > The amount of time spent with each mother was recorded
      > The monkeys were frightened with a loud noise to test which mother they preferred when stressed
      > The long-term effects were recorded, such as sociability and relationships to their future offspring.
    • Harlow
      Findings
      > Monkeys spent more time with the cloth mother than the wire mother.
      > When frightened the monkeys would go to the cloth mother.
      > The monkeys later in life had emotional damage such as being much more timid, being easily bullied, difficulty mating and females being inadequate mothers when they were older.
    • Harlow
      Conclusion
      > Contact comfort is the most important factor when forming an attachment
    • Harlow AO3
      :) Practical applications
      > The principles of the theory that contact comfort is most important can be used in the real world to highlight risk factors and find prevention strategies for poor human attachments
      > Used by clinical psychologists to prevent poor outcomes eg. problematic future relationships
      > Therefore an important part of applied psychology when explaining the formations of attachment
    • Harlow AO3
      :( Animal bias
      > Human behaviour may be more complex then animals
      > Human emotion is more sophisticated then animals
      > Therefore there are issues with extrapolating the findings of Harlows research into human attachment
    • Harlow AO3
      :( Raises ethical issues
      > Monkeys suffered greatly - emotional issues later on in life and sometimes died
      > Limiting Harlows research into attachments in animals