explanations of attachment

    Cards (16)

    • Attachment
      The strong bond that develops between an infant and their primary caregiver, usually their biological mother
    • Biological psychologists' view on attachment
      • Attachment bond is innate, babies are primed with the need to attach to their mother figures, and caregivers have an innate response to care for them
    • Classical conditioning explanation of attachment
      1. Neutral stimulus (mother) becomes associated with unconditioned stimulus (food), resulting in conditioned response (pleasure)
      2. Infant learns association between mother (conditioned stimulus) and food - feels pleasure (love) - this forms attachment
    • Operant conditioning explanation of attachment- two way process
      1. Crying behavior is positively reinforced when parent provides milk (positive reinforcement)
      2. Crying behavior is negatively reinforced when parent provides care and stops the unpleasant stimulus - strengthens attachment
    • Primary drives

      Instinctual desires required for survival and reproduction (e.g. sleep, hunger, thirst, sex)
    • Secondary drives
      Learned desires that can ultimately satisfy primary drives (e.g. money, satisfaction of caregiver)
    • Attachment- SEARS
      A secondary drive, infants seek attachment with their mothers to satisfy the primary drive of hunger
    • Bowlby's Monotropic Theory

      • Infants have an innate, instinctive drive to form a strong bond with their primary caregiver (usually the mother) for evolutionary survival reasons
      • Infants are born with social release behaviors (e.g. crying, smiling) that elicit instinctive caregiving responses from mothers - reciprocal process
      • Attachment in the critical period (first 6 months) - sensitive period
    • Learning theory - 'cupboard love' Dollard and miller
    • AO3 learning theory - counter-evidence from animal studies: Lorenz geese imprint on first moving object (no food). Harlow monkeys favoured comfort over food.
    • AO3 learning theory - counter-evidence from human studies: schaffer and emerson babies formed attachment to their mother with no food involved.
    • AO3 learning theory - conditioning involved: babies associate warm and comfortable feeling with a caregiver which influences attachment. Learning theory useful.
    • Internal working model - child forms mental representation of relationship with the primary caregiver
      serves as a model for what future relationships are like
      base their parenting style from their experience of their parents
    • AO3 - Monotropy lacks validity: Shaffer and Emerson - a minority of babies attached to multiple people. First attachment is just stronger not different qualities.
    • AO3 - support for social releasers: Brazelton - observed babies trigger interactions. When attachment figures ignore babies social releases babies became distressed. Social releasers important in emotional development.
    • AO3 - support for internal working models: Bailey - observed attachment relationship in 99 mothers and I year olds. Mothers with poor attachment to primary caregiver were poorly attached to babies.