Ainsworths Strange Situation PsychBoost

Cards (16)

  • Ainsworth's technique for assessing attachment

    The Strange Situation
  • Ainsworth expanded on Bowlby's work, identifying key behaviors that indicate the strength of an infant's attachment to their caregiver
  • Behaviors indicating attachment

    • Infants maintaining closeness to their mother, using her as a secure base for exploration
    • Infants demonstrating anxiety around strangers
    • Infants showing distress when separated from their mother
    • Infants' reaction when reunited with their mother
    • How well the mother can interpret and respond to their infant's needs
  • Ainsworth's three types of infant attachment

    • Insecure avoidant (type A)
    • Secure (type B)
    • Insecure resistant (type C)
  • Insecure avoidant (type A) attachment

    • Infants keep a certain level of detachment from their mothers
    • Explore environment freely without frequently turning to mother
    • Limited stranger anxiety
    • Little to no distress when separated, indifferent reaction upon return
    • Mirrored in mothers' less responsive behaviors
  • Secure (type B) attachment

    • Infants feel confident exploring surroundings, but return to mother as a safe base when encountering strangers
    • Moderate stranger anxiety, distressed when mother leaves but positive and quick recovery when she returns
    • Due to caregivers' sensitive and consistent responsiveness
  • Insecure resistant (type C) attachment

    • Infants less confident in exploring surroundings, clingy to mother
    • High anxiety around strangers, very distressed when separated
    • Complex emotions when mother returns - desire for closeness but also resentment
    • Mirrors unpredictable nature of caregivers
  • The Strange Situation

    A structured observational technique with two observers, designed to reveal infant and mother's responses across different stages
  • Ainsworth's research identified three primary attachment styles based on patterns of behavior during the Strange Situation
  • Attachment styles identified by Ainsworth
    • Secure type B
    • Insecure avoidant type A
    • Insecure resistant type C
  • Secure type B infants
    • Most common, making up 2/3 of the sample
    • Displayed moderate stranger anxiety and distress when mother departed, but easily comforted when she returned
    • Suggests trust in caregiver's responsiveness
  • Insecure avoidant type A infants
    • Second most common at 22% of the sample
    • Had low stranger anxiety, appeared indifferent to mother's departure and return
    • Typically associated with mothers showing low sensitive responsiveness
  • Insecure resistant type C infants

    • Rarest type at 12% of the sample
    • Showed intense distress during separation, ambivalent behavior when mother returned
    • Often associated with inconsistent motherly responsiveness
  • Van IJzendoorn and Kroonenberg

    meta-analysis of attachment studies in 8 countries found secure attachment was most prevalent, but cultural differences in other attachment styles
  • Germany had the most avoidant infants, Japan and Israel the highest resistant attachment, China the lowest secure attachment, UK the most secure</b>
  • Ainsworth's Strange Situation was developed by Mary Salter Ainsworth, who observed that children showed different patterns of behavior when separated from their mothers.