4D studies of attachment Flashcards
1
Q
the strange situation experiment (ainsworth)
A
a mother and her young infant are studied in an unfamiliar room. During this study, the infant and their mother experience a series of separations and reunions to analyse the attachment style occurring
2
Q
secure attachment (ainsworth)
A
- Balance between dependence and exploration.
- Infant uses caregiver as a ‘safe base’ to venture out and explore unfamiliar environment, shows some distress and explores less when caregiver is gone.
- When caregiver returns, infant is happy to see them and seeks physical contact.
3
Q
insecure-avoidant attachment (ainsworth)
A
- Infant does not seek contact with caregiver, treats them as a stranger.
- Rarely cries when caregiver leaves and ignores them upon return.
- Research findings suggest that this may be the result of neglectful or abusive caregivers.
4
Q
insecure-anxious (resistant) attachment (ainsworth)
A
- Infant is anxious even when caregiver is near.
- Becomes very upset when separated.
- Upon return, the Infant both wants to be held and yet squirms to get free as if unsure of what it wants.
- Thought to be the result of caregivers who are inconsistent/not very responsive to Infants, and therefore the Infant doesn’t feel as if it can rely on the caregiver.
5
Q
the feeding hypothesis
A
His theory surrounded the notion that the mother becomes associated with an extremely powerful reinforcer – food!
6
Q
harlow’s experiment
A
- The IV was the type substitute mother: either cloth or wire
- The DV was the strength of attachment the infant monkeys had with their substitute mothers, measured by the amount of time spent with them and
- In later versions of the experiment, fear-inducing stimuli was used to see which mother the monkeys went to for comfort when afraid
7
Q
harlow’s conclusions
A
- He found that the baby monkeys spent most of their time on the cloth monkey and they preferred comfort overfeeding.
- Contact comfort is more important than feeding in the formation of the infant-mother attachment.
8
Q
advantage of animals in research
A
- large sample sizes of humans can be costly and time consuming
- animals are easier to control than humans
- human participants may be unavailable
- animals have shorter gestation periods
9
Q
disadvantages of animals in research
A
- Only behaviours can be studied, as animals are unable to report on their mental processes.
- The generalisability of results from studies using animals to humans is relatively low as animals are different to humans in many ways.