Ainsworth and Bell Flashcards
Ainsworth and Bell aim
To use a lab setting and conduct a controlled observation to investigate attachment behaviours by placing babies in “strange situations”
Ainsworth and Bell ppts
56 children, 49-51 weeks
White middle class parents
Found through paediatricians in a private practice
Ainsworth and Bell procedure
- Mother carries baby into room, observer follows then leaves
- Mother puts child in specific place and sits down quietly in her chair, only participating if child seeks attention
- Stranger enters, sits for 1 minute, talks to mother for 1 minute, approaches baby with a toy. Mother leaves after 3 minutes.
- Stranger sits if baby happy, if baby inactive stranger engages with toys; if baby distressed, stranger tries to distract or comfort for 3 minutes unless child cannot be comforted.
- Mother enters and waits at door for baby to see and respond; stranger leaves; once baby is settled with toys mother leaves saying “bye bye”
- Baby left alone for 3 minutes unless distressed.
- Stranger enters, sits if baby happy, if baby inactive stranger engages with toys; if distressed tries to distract or comfort for 3 minutes unless child cannot be comforted.
- Mother returns and stranger leaves.
Tested individually, intended to mimic everyday life, observed through one-way mirror, room marked into 16 squares.
Time sampling every 15 seconds, behaviour recorded for strength (7 point scale), frequency and duration
Ainsworth and Bell results
Exploratory behaviour: reduced when child left with stranger. Showed more interest when mother engaged but not when stranger engaged.
Crying: minimal crying when stranger entered but increased when mother left. Peaked in episode 6 and didn’t decrease in episode 7 when stranger returned.
Search behaviour (following mother to door): increased when stranger was present without mother and increased most when left alone in episode 6
Proximity seeking and contact maintaining (reaching for mother and resisting release): contact maintaining shown most when mother returned but less towards stranger
Contact-resisting and proximity avoiding(pushing away/ignoring adult): avoidant behaviours show mostly when mother returned. About a third of all babies resisted contact towards mother when she returned in episode 5.
Ainsworth and Bell conclusions
Attachment figure is used as a secure base for exploration by infant
Attachment is different between care-giver and child and stranger and child
BACKGROUND: Bowlby
Ppts: 44 juvenile thieves who had been transferred to the child guidance clinic, and a comparison group
Method: Given assessments in their intelligence, emotional attitude towards the test and psychiatric history then interviewed.
Results: teenagers separated from their mothers in the first 2 years of their lives were more likely to show “affectionless psychopathy”
BACKGROUND: Hodges and Tizzard
Longitudinal study in whilst enjoying who were admitted to a home before 6 months who were either adopted or returned to mother by 4 years old
Showed attachment did happen after the critical period, but more often with adoptive parents as they tried harder
There were still long-term behavioural effects such as having fewer friends, being more likely to bully and worse sibling relationships than control group at age 15