Bowlby

Cards (9)

  • What are Bowlby’s main theories?
    • Social releasers
    • Monotropic bonds
    • Critical period
    • Internal working model
    • Continuity hypothesis
  • What are social releasers?
    Behaviours used by infants to ensure attachments form (eg giggling and smiling)
  • What are monotropic bonds?
    Babies need a unique relationship with one person (usually mother) to learn skills and maintain proximity to the parent
  • What is the critical period?
    Attachments will occur in a critical period of 0 to 2 and a half years old. If a child doesn’t form an attachment in this period, one will not occur
    He later proposed a sensitive period of 5 years
  • What is the internal working model?
    Provides a template for future attachments
    Allows individuals to predict, control and manipulate their environment
  • What is the continuity hypothesis?
    There is a link between a person's attachment type as a child and their attachment with their own children as an adult
  • What supports Bowlby‘s theories?
    • Lorenz and Harlow’s studies
    • Staying close to parents supports the idea of attachments being innate
    • Support for continuity hypothesis - Hazan and Shaver (love quiz)
  • What is some research going against Bowlby?
    • Rutter - infants display a range of attachment behaviours to those other than mothers - there is no specific behaviours for mothers
    • Lamb - infants have different attachments with people for different purposes, going against the idea of monotropy
  • What are the issues with Bowlby’s research?
    • Determinist
    • Doesn’t take into account individual differences