attachment

    Cards (71)

    • What is attachment?
      a close emotional bond between two people
    • What is reciprocity?
      both the caregiver and baby respond to each others signals and each elicits a response form the other
    • interactional synchrony
      Mother and infant reflect both the actions and emotions of the other and do this in a co-ordinated way.
    • Alert Phases (Reciprocity)

      they signal using eye contact they they are ready for a spell of interaction.

      (feldman and eidelman 2007)
    • Active Involvement (Reciprocity)

      babies have an active role and can initiate interactions.

      (keith moore)
    • Importance for attachment

      for development of the attachment it is vital to have a better quality relationship through interactional synchrony.

      (isabella et al)- 30 mothers, assessed synchrony and quality of relationship
    • filmed observations (AO3)

      strengths
      - other activity which may distract a baby is controlled
      - observations can be recorded and analysed later
      - unlikely researchers will miss seeing any key behaviors
      - more than one observer can record data and establish inter-rarer reliability
      - babies don't know they are being observed so their behavior doesn't change when being recorded
      - good reliability and validity
    • Difficulty observing babies (AO3)

      limitation

      - babies lack co-ordination and must of their body is immobile
      - movements are subtle expression changes and hand movements
      - relies on inference, can't actually see from the baby's perspective
      - may not have special meaning
    • developmental importance (AO3)

      limitation

      - (ruth feldman)
      - synchrony gives names to patterns of observable behaviors but doesn't tell us the purpose or reasoning

      counter
      - (isabella et al)
      - important for good quality attachment
    • Schaffer's stages of attachment

      Asocial (first few weeks)
      indiscriminate (2-7 months)
      specific (7 months)
      multiple (1 year)
    • Schaffer and Emerson
      -60 babies- 31 male, 29 female
      -Glasgow
      -visited at home
      -every month for the first year and then at 18 months
      - researcher asked mother questions about kind of protest
      -Between 25 and 32 weeks, babies should seperation anxiety towards specific attachment
      -40 weeks,80% had specific attachment and 30% had multiple attachments
    • good external validity (AO3)

      strength
      - observations made by parents during ordinary activity's
      - researchers observing behaviors may make the babies distracted or anxious
      - natural behaviour

      counter
      - unlikely to be objective
      - biased- can't recall accurately or as much, may want to seem like they are more attached to seem like a better mum
    • poor evidence for asocial stage

      limitation

      - hard to record baby behavior- immobile, poor co-ordination, subtle
      - babies might be social but appear asocial
    • real world application
      strength

      - tells us that starting daycare with an unfamiliar adult may be problematic at the start of the child's life
      - this can help parents plan day care
    • attachment to fathers
      Most babies attach to their father (75% by 18 months) but rarely as the first attachment (only 3% first sole attachment) (Schaffer and Emerson)
    • distinctive role of fathers

      - grossman et al
      - longitudinal study
      - babies attachment studied to teen years
      - play and stimulation rather than emotional development
    • Fathers as primary caregivers

      -they adopt behaviours more typical of mothers
      - tiffany field
      -when 4 mnth old babies were filmed face to face with primary caregiver father they spent more time smiling, imitating and holding infants than secondary caregiver mothers.
    • confusion over research questions (AO3)

      limitation

      - lack of clarity
      - some researchers study fathers as a secondary attachment figure (look into difference) whilst others focus on as a primary (look into maternal role)
    • conflicting evidence (AO3)

      limitation
      if fathers have a distinctive role that children growing up with a single parent or two lgbt parents would have different development however this is the case

      counter
      the parents may have distinctive roles but adapt to the roles of the other
    • Real world application (AO3)
      strength

      - mothers may feel pressured to stay at home
      - fathers may feel pressured to work
      - this research can be reassuring for parents, gives advice, anxiety is reduced
    • Imprinting
      the process by which certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life
    • sexual imprinting

      the process by which a young animal learns the characteristics of a desirable mate from who they imprinted on
    • Lorenz's research
      - classic experiment
      - control group
      - gosling eggs - imprinted on him
    • Harlow's Monkeys
      - 16 monkeys
      - two wire mothers- cloth vs food
      - monkeys preferred contact with the comfortable cloth mother than the one with the food
      - monkeys had long term effects
    • research support (AO3)
      strength

      - regolin and vallortigara replicated study with simple shape combinations that moved
    • Generalisability to humans (AO3)

      limitation

      - both studies are animals not humans
      - humans are more complex- two way attachment process not just the young to mother
    • real world value (AO3)
      strength

      - harlows monekys helped social workers and clinical psychology understand the risk factors of children with a lack of bonding experience
    • learning theory
      - classical conditioning
      caregiver = neutral stimuli with no response
      when caregiver gives food the baby associates them with food and the feeling they get when they eat the food

      - operant conditioning
      negative (for caregiver to stop crying) and positive reinforcement (for baby getting food)

      - secondary drive
      attachment second, hunger first
      innate biological motive
    • counter- evidence from animal studies (AO3)
      limitation

      - lorenz's geese imprinted regardless of food
      - harlow's monkeys preferred comfort over food
    • counter evidence from human studies (AO3)
      limitation

      schaffer and emerson
      - babies form to mother regardless of who feeds them

      isabella et al
      - to do with synchrony not food
    • some conditioning may be involved (AO3)

      strength
      - food may not be the main role but conditioning might be

      counter
      - conditioning sees the baby in a passive role which is incorrect
    • Bowbly's monotropic theory
      - singular caregiver attachment- important and different to others
      - law of continuity: caregiver needs to give constant and predictable care to better their quality
      - law of accumulated separation: effects of the caregivers separation will add up
    • Social releases (Monotropic Theory)

      innate cute behaviors like smiling coping and gripping to get more attention from adults
    • critical period (monotropic theory)

      - 6 months
      - sensitive period
      - attachment must form for good development/ attachments later on
    • internal working model

      A set of beliefs and expectations about how people behave in social relationships, and also guidelines for interpreting others' actions, and habitual responses to make in social settings.
    • validity of monotropy challenged (AO3)

      limitation

      - schaffer and emerson found that most babies attach to one person at first but will attach to others too eventually
      - first attachment may be important as it is stronger but isn't necessarily different
    • support for social releases (AO3)
      strength

      - brazelton et al
      - observed babies trigger interactions with adults using social releasers
      - ordered them to ignore social releasers
      - babies became distressed
    • Support for internal working model (AO3)

      strength
      - bailey et al
      - 99 mother daughter relationships and their quality (3 gens)
      - those with poor attachments to mother are more likely to be poorly attached to daughter

      counter
      other important influences: genetic differences in anxiety and sociability
    • Ainsworth Strange Situation

      - a sequence of staged episodes that illustrate the strength of attachment between a child and (typically) his or her mother
      - proximity seeking behaviour
      - exploration and secure base behaviour
      - stranger anxiety
      - separation anxiety
      - response to reunion
    • secure attachment

      Infants use the mother as a home base from which to explore when all is well, but seek physical comfort and consolation from her if frightened or threatened
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