animal studies Flashcards

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1
Q

what were the animal studies in the attachment theory

A
  • Harlow + Harlow
  • Lorenz
  • Guiton (support for Lorenz)
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2
Q

what was the Harlow + Harlow animal study (AO1)

A
  • in a controlled environment, infant monkeys reared with two mother surrogates
  • plain wire mother dispensing food, cloth-covered mother with no food
  • Behaviour was observed and time spent with each mother was recorded
  • long-term effects recorded: sociability, relationship to offspring, etc
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3
Q

what were the findings of the Harlow + Harlow animal experiment (AO1)

A
  • The babies monkeys spent on average 18 hrs a day on the comfort mother and 1 hour on the feeding mother.
  • They also ran to the comfort mother when frightened.
  • This showed that contact comfort was more important to the baby monkeys than food.
  • also found that there was a critical period in attachment- but this time it was 90 days as opposed to several hours.
  • In further experiments they investigated the effects of maternal deprivation by rearing monkeys with only wire
    mothers into adulthood.
  • These monkeys were deranged- they were aggressive and unsociable, unskilled at mating (further evidence that early attachment effects reproductive behaviour) and some
    even attacked and killed their own children.
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4
Q

what are the AO3 points for Harlow and Harlow’s animal study

A

-ve: major issue with lack of standardisation
+ve: theoretical and practical value

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5
Q

expand on the -ve AO3 point, major issue with lack of standardisation, for Harlow and Harlow’s animal study

A
  • One major confounding variable of this research is that the heads of the two monkeys were completely different.
  • This total lack of standardisation decreases the validity of the research.
  • The comfort monkey had by far the more realistic face- so perhaps this was why the monkey spent so much more time on it- and not because it preferred comfort over food- it
    just looked more like a real mother
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6
Q

expand on the +ve AO3 point, theoretical and practical value, for Harlow and Harlow’s animal study

A
  • results have contributed greatly to psychologists understanding of attachment theory.
  • They demonstrated the importance of comfort over food and also of stable early attachment for success in future relationships, plus the notion of a critical period of
    attachment.
  • In practical terms social workers have applied these theories in order to understand risk factors in childhood neglect and abuse and so develop interventions for prevention.
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7
Q

what was Lorenz’s animal study?

A
  • goose eggs were randomly divided
  • half were hatched with the mother present (in natural environment) so she was the first moving object they saw
  • half were hatched in an incubator with Lorenz present so that he was the first moving object they saw
  • the behaviour of all goslings was observed and recorded
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8
Q

what were the findings of Lorenz’s animal study?

A
  • baby geese “imprinted” on whoever was the first living object they came into contact with (mum or Lorenz)
  • They would follow the figure they imprinted on around, and if it were Lorenz, even perform mating rituals to him.
  • Lorenz identified that there was a critical period in attachment of just 18 hours after birth.
  • If the geese did not imprint during this critical period then they would never have healthy attachment
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9
Q

what are the AO3 points for Lorenz’s animal study

A

+ve Guiton support
-ve Guiton refute
-ve extrapolation of data

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10
Q

expand on the +ve AO3 point, Guiton support, for Lorenz’s animal study

A
  • further support for imprinting by Guiton
  • he showed that chicks imprinted on the first moving object they saw- a rubber glove used to feed the chicks.
  • They even performed mating rituals to the gloves in a similar way that the geese did to Lorenz.
  • This suggests that imprinting is linked to later reproductive behaviour.
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11
Q

expand on the -ve AO3 point, Guiton refute, for Lorenz’s animal study

A
  • If imprinting occurs with an inappropriate ‘object’
    (or living thing) this could have disastrous consequences in evolutionary terms!
  • In further evaluation, however, it was found that these chicks, would, in time, learn to mate with other chicks- so the effects of imprinting could be reversed.
  • This suggests that the impact of imprinting on mating behaviour was not as serious as Lorenz believed.
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12
Q

expand on the -ve AO3 point, extrapolation of data, for Lorenz’s animal study

A
  • We have the issue of extrapolation of data from animal research.
  • Animals are not the same as humans- we are so much more complex given our cognitive and emotional abilities- so any results obtained must be used with caution.
  • Furthermore, birds are very different from other mammals who DO demonstrate emotional attachment. This means we should be extra cautious of generalising Lorenz’s research to humans.
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