Schaffer and Emerson

    Cards (13)

    • Believed that attachments were not forced at birth in human babies, and so were interested in documenting the process of attachment formation
    • Hypothesised:
      • infants develop bonds with their caregivers and these bonds become stronger over a period of time
    • Sample:
      • studied 60 babies from working-class Glaswegian families
    • Longitudinal Study:
      • studied at monthly intervals for the first year and then again at 18 months
    • Children all studied in their own home
    • Their interactions with their caregivers were interviewed
    • Behavioural measures:
      • indicators that an attachment is formed
      • separation anxiety
      • everyday situations, the baby was left alone in the room; alone with others; in the pram outside; being put down after being held
      • fear of strangers, on each home visit the researcher always approached the child first
    • Found 4 distinct stages; asocial stage, indiscriminate stage, specific attachment, multiple attachment
    • Asocial stage:
      • up to 6/8 weeks
      • saw that babies have a bias towards human-like faces
      • they show a similar response to both objects and people
      • begin to feel happy/happier w people
    • Indiscriminate attachment:
      • 2-7 months
      • baby becoming more sociable
      • prefer human company
      • comforted by anyone, do not prefer particular individuals
      • becoming increasingly aware of familiar and unfamiliar faces
    • Specific attachment:
      • 7 months
      • now more likely to show; separation anxiety and fear of strangers
      • separation anxiety; prefer to stay close to the primary caregiver, protesting when the primary caregiver leaves
      • fear of strangers; avoid unfamiliar people, protest if strangers try to handle them
    • Multiple attachments:
      • 10 months
      • form strong emotional ties with major caregivers; parents, grandparents, siblings and childcare staff
      • known as secondary attachments
      • 75% had formed an attachment with father by 18 months
    • Primary attachment figures (PAF)
      • for most babies, the PAF was the mother
      • with only 3% of the babies having the father as their PAF at this stage
      • in 27% both the mother and the father were first attachments
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