Schaffer and Emerson

    Cards (24)

    • Schaffer's stages of attachment

      Stages of attachment as identified by Schaffer
    • Psychologist observes behaviour at several points out his first year
    • Asocial stage

      • Baby's behaviour towards inanimate objects and humans is quite similar
      • Some preference for familiar adults more easily calmed by the
      • Babies are also happier in the presence of other humans
    • Indiscriminate attachment

      • Babies now display more observable social behaviour with a preference for people rather than inanimate objects
      • They recognise and prefer familiar adults
      • Babies do not show stranger or separation anxiety
      • Attachment is indiscriminate because it's the same towards all
    • Specific attachment
      • Stranger anxiety and separation anxiety when separated from one particular adult
      • Baby is said to have formed a specific attachment with the primary attachment figure
    • Multiple attachments

      • Secondary attachments with other adults form shortly after
      • By the age of one year the majority of infants had multiple secondary attachments
    • The behaviour of the babies was unlikely to be affected by the presence of observers
    • Participants behaved naturally while being observed
    • A strength of Schaffer and Emerson study is that it has external validity
    • Most of the observations (not stranger anxiety) were made by parents during ordinary activities and reported to researchers
    • Another strength of the study is that it was carried out longitudinally
    • Longitudinal design

      The same children were followed-up and observed regularly
    • Cross-sectional design
      Observing different children at each age
    • Longitudinal designs

      • Have better internal validity because they do not have the confounding variable of individual differences between participants
    • There may also be a problem with how multiple attachment is assessed
    • Just because a baby gets distressed when an individual leaves the room does not necessarily mean that the individual is a 'true' attachment figure
    • Bowlby (1969) pointed out that children may be distressed when a playmate leaves the room, but this does not signify attachment to them
    • Schaffer and Emerson's view of stages does not distinguish between behaviour shown towards secondary attachment figures and towards playmates
    • Schaffer and Emerson describe the first few weeks as the 'asocial stage', although important interactions take place
    • Young babies have poor coordination and are fairly immobile, making it difficult to make judgments based on observations of their behaviour
    • It may be the babies are actually quite social but, because of flawed methods they appear to be asocial
    • Bowlby (1969) argues that most (or all) babies form attachments to a single main carer before they are able to develop multiple attachments
    • Multiple attachments appear from the outset in cultures where multiple attachments are the norm (based on research by van Ijzendoorn 1993)
    • Such cultures are called collectivist because families work together jointly in everything (e.g. producing food and raising children)
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