Attachment

Cards (25)

  • Define an attachment
    Attachment is the formation of a strong, reciprocal, emotional bond between an infant and a primary caregiver, it serves the function of protecting an infant
  • How can the strength of a bond be seen
    • Reciprocity
    • interactional synchrony
  • What are the stages of attachment
    • Asocial stage
    • indiscriminate stage
    • specific attachment stage
    • multiple attachment stage
  • Define reciprocity
    Reciprocity is when each person takes it in turn to respond to the others signal, similar to a coversation
  • Define Interactional synchrony
    Interactional synchrony is a simultaneous interaction between the infant and primary caregiver as they mirror actions and emotions
  • Who created the stages of attachment
    Schaffer and Emerson
  • Who looked at the role of the father
    Grossman
  • Who conducted animal studies
    • Lorenz
    • Harlow
  • What are the types of attachment
    • Insecure avoidant - type A
    • secure - type B
    • insecure resistant - type C
  • What did Schaffer and Emerson find from their study
    • 65% of infants specific attachment was with their mother
    • only 3% of infants specific attachment was with the father
    • sensitive responsiveness
    • by 18 month, 75% of the infants had formed attachments to their fathers
  • Define sensitive responsiveness
    Sensitive responsiveness refers to the idea that social interaction and play matter most when forming an attachment
  • What facts can be used for the role of the father
    • Grossman study
    • Schaffer and Emerson - only 3% of infants specific attachment was their father
    • Infants had formed their secondary attachment with their father by 18 months in 75% of cases
  • Explain Grossman’s study
    • Longitudinal study
    • Grossman looked at both the parents behaviours and its relationship to the quality of the children’s attachment into their teens
    • fathers were seen to engage infants in active play activities more consistently than mothers
    • fathers interactions emphasise stimulation so their role is to encourage risk taking behaviours compared to the more comforting style of mothers
  • Explain Meltzoff and Moore’s study
    • An adult displayed four different stimuli (three facial expressions and one hand gesture)
    • the infants behaviour in response to the stimuli was observed
    • there was clear association between the infants behaviour and that of the adult model
    • this supports Interactional synchrony
  • What sample was used in Ainsworth strange situation
    106 m.c American infants (12 to 18 months old) and their mothers
  • What did Ainsworth strange situation find
    • 2/3 of the infants had a secure attachment, 22% were insecure avoidant and 12% were insecure resistant
    • identified a range of shared behaviours that indicate attachment strength
    • e.g proximity to the mother, separation and stranger anxiety, reunion response and sensitive responsiveness from the mother
  • What sample was used in Van Izjendoorn’s study
    Large scale meta analysis from 32 studies in 8 countries
  • What did Van Izjendoorn find
    • Secure attachment type was the most common in all countries
    • generally insecure resistant was the least common
    • the avoidant attachment type was the most common in western cultures which suggests that parenting style can affect attachment
  • Define institutionalisation
    When children are cared for by the state
  • Define deprivation
    Deprivation means that an infant is not receiving suitable emotional care from a primary attachment figure
  • Define privation
    Privation refers to a total lack of care so that there is no ability to form an attachment bond
  • Explain Rutter et al Procedure
    • The children that had been adopted from Romanian institutions were grouped into three categories based on age
    • under 6 months, 6 months to 2 years and over 2 years old
    • each group was assesses at ages 4, 6, 11 and 15
  • Rutter et al findings
    • Adoption within the first 6 months was crucial as their rate of recovery depended on the age that they were adopted
    • age 11 check up findings - children adopted after 6 months showed significant delays in their emotional, intellectual and social development
    • the children that were adopted under 6 months had a higher IQ than those adopted after 2 years old
  • Who conducted a study on Roman orphans
    Rutter et al
  • Romanian orphan studies evaluation
    Strengths - practical applications
    strength - research support