aimed to investigate formation of early attachment
method
60 babies- 29 female 31 male, from Glasgow and predominately from skilled working class families
babies were visited at home every month for a year then again at 18 months
researcher asked mother questions about the kind of protest the baby showed in seven everyday separations
findings
between 25 and 32 weeks of age, about 50% of babies showed signs of separation anxiety
attachment tended to be caregiver who was most interactive and sensitive to infant signals and not necessarily the person who spent most time with them
40 weeks- 80% had a specific attachment and nearly 30% had multiple attachments
stages of attachment
asocial stage
indiscriminate attachment
specific attachment
multiple attachment
asocial stage (firstfewweeks)
not really asocial stage
baby recognises and forms bonds with carers
baby’s behaviour towards non human objects and humans are quite similar
show some preference for familiar adults
happier in the presence of humans
indiscriminate attachment (2-7months)
babies display more observable social behaviour
preference for humans over inanimate objects
recognise and prefer familiar adults
accepts comfort from any adult
does not really show signs of separation or stranger anxiety
specific attachment (7+months)
babies start to display separation and stranger anxiety as they become anxious when separated from the adult (usually biologicalmother) this adult is said to be the primaryattachmentfigure
not necessarily the person who spends the most time with the, but who offers the most interaction
multiple attachments
shortly after attachment to primary figure
baby extends attachment behaviour to other adults that they regularly spend time with- termed secondary attachment figure