bowlby's theory

    Cards (15)

    • Bowlby:
      • rejects learning theory + cupboard love
      • proposes an evolutionary explanation, attachment = innate system designed to survive
    • evolutionary psychology:
      • form of biological approach + rejects behaviourism and learning theory
    • Bowlby's theory:
      • children typically develop 1 strong attachment early on (first weeks of life)
      • more time spent with attachment figure stronger the attachment, time spent apart creates challenges
    • law of continuity:
      • the more constant + predictable the childs care the better the quality of attachment
    • law of accumulated separation:
      • everytime theyre separated effects add up, safest amount of separation is none
    • process of bowlby's theory:
      • child is born
      • child uses social releasers to encourage attachments
      • child + caregiver develop monotropic attachment
      • each subsequent separation damages child's wellbeing
    • social releasers:
      • set of innate behaviours infants are born with, activate the adult attachment system
    • monotropic:
      • one particular distinct attachment which is central to child's development
    • critical period:
      • monotropic attachment must be formed in first 2 years of life, develops into internal working model
      • if it isnt formed in time, may never form at all
      • continued disruption to monotropic attachment can lead to developmental + cognitive problems
    • internal working model:
      • future template for all subsequent attachments
    • Hazan + Shaver's love quiz:
      • created questionnaire to assess people's attachments
      • correlated data with assessments of participants parental attachements
    • EVALUATION: support for internal working model
      • love quiz found positive correlation between early attachments + later relationships
      • Bailey et al - research with 99 mothers, found those with poor attachment more likely to have children who were poorly attached
      • early childhood experiences do affect our later lives, supports internal working model
    • EVALUATION: support for social releasers
      • Brazelton et al - observed babies + mothers during interactions + found interactional synchrony
      • further observation to experiment - primary caregivers told to ignore babies signals, became distressed, curled up into fetal position
      • child response was strong, supports Bowlby's ideas about significance of infant social behaviour in establishing early attachments
    • EVALUATION: alternative explanations (individual differences)
      • Kagan - proposed temperament hypothesis - childs genetically inherited personality traits play a role in forming attachments
      • infants have differing temperaments due to biological makeup - some sociable+ easy, some anxious + difficult, Bowlby ignores this + focuses on early childhood experiences and quality
      • oversight as personality differences can influence secure/insecure attachments - theory may be incomplete
    • EVALUATION: mixed evidence for monotropy
      • schaffer + emerson: infants can form multiple attachments - 27% formed joint attachment
      • fact challenges idea that infants need one attachment that supersedes all others + forms foundations for future relationships
      • conflicting evidence for central concept for monotropy challenges theory as a whole