Theories arguing the mother's role cannot be replaced by the father may lead to negative implications, such as single-father families feeling they cannot fully provide for infants
Research on caregiver-infant interactions could lead to legislation ensuring equal paternity and maternity leave, which may reduce the number of males in the workforce but also help address the gender pay gap
Infants become attached to their caregiver because they learn the caregiver provides food (classical conditioning) and responds to their crying (operant conditioning)
Infants have an innate instinctual drive to form a strong attachment to their mother, which is vital for survival. Lack of monotropy can lead to permanent negative consequences.
e to think that they have complete conscious control over their relationships including responsibility for the success of relationships not that this is set in infancy
Ainsworth identified behaviors that indicated attachment strength: proximity to the mother, exploration safe based Behavior, stranger anxiety, separation anxiety, reunion response and sensitive responsiveness
Are clingy and have high stranger and separation anxiety, when the mothers return the infants appear ambivalent with mixed emotions, mothers are inconsistent with sensitive responsiveness