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Psychology
Attachment
Bowlby's Theory
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Cards (9)
Monotropy
The idea that the one relationship that the infant has with his/her primary attachment figure is of special
significance
in
emotional
development.
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Law of
continuity
(Bowlby's
monotropic
theory)
The more constant and
predictable
a child's care, the better the quality of their
attachment.
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Law of
accumulated separation
The effects of every separation from the mother
add up
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Social releasers
-
Bowlby
suggested that babies are born with a set of innate
cute
behaviours like smiling that encourages the attention from an adult.
- He called these
social releasers
as their purpose is to activate the adult attachment system i.e. make an adult feel
love
towards a child.
- He also noticed this behaviour was a
reciprocal process.
- Both babies and mothers have innate
predisposition
to become attached and
social releasers
trigger that response in caregivers.
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Critical period
- Bowlby was influenced by
Lorenz
, believing that attachment was innate & that there was a
critical period
for it to occur.
- Bowlby proposed that there is a critical period of around
2
years when the infant attachment system is
active.
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Sensitive period
-
2
years, time child's attachment is
active.
- If not done more
difficult
to attach later.
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Internal working model
A set of beliefs and
expectations
about how people behave in social relationships, and also guidelines for
interpreting
others' actions, and habitual responses to make in social settings.
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Limitations of Bowlby's theory of attachment
Validity of
monotropy
challenged
-
Schaffer
and
Emerson
found a significant minority of babies formed multiple attachments at the same time.
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Strengths of Bowlby's theory of attachment
Support for social releasers
- Brazelton et al instructed primary attachment figures to
ignore
social releasers.
- The babies got
distressed
and some curled up and lay
motionless.
Support for
internal working model
-
Bailey
et al measured mothers attachments to their own primary attachment figures.
- Mothers with
poor
attachment to their primary attachment figures were more likely to have
poorly
attached babies.
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