Attachement- The Starnge Situation Flashcards
What is the strange situation
A controlled observation designed to test attachment security.
Infants are assessed on their response to playing in an unfamiliar room , left with stranger and being reunited with care giver
What is the procure of the strange situation
In a room with controlled conditions with two way mirror through which psychologists can observe infants behaviour without infant noticing
What are the behaviours used to judge attachment
Proximity seeking, exploration and secure base behaviour , stranger anxiety , separation anxiety , response to union
List all 7 episodes and what they test
- Caregiver takes the infant into labs and leaves them to explore - tests exploration and secure base behaviour
- A stranger enters and interacts with the infant - tests stranger anxiety
- The caregiver leaves child and stranger together - tests separation and stranger anxiety
- The caregiver returns and stranger leaves - tests reunion behaviour + exploration/secure base
- The caregiver leaves the child alone - tests separation anxiety
- The stranger returns - tests stranger anxiety
- The caregiver returns and is reunited with child - tests reunion behaviour
What is secure attachment
Type b in attachment types
Most desirable attachment type
Associated with psychologically healthy outcomes
60%-75% infants most common
In the strange situation how did infants act if they had secure attachment
Explore happily - regularly went back to caregiver
- moderate separation distress
- moderate stranger anxiety
- require comfort from caregiver , ease of comfort at reunion
Explain insecure avoidant attachment
An attachment characterised by low anxiety but weak attachment
20-25% toddlers
Type A
What do infants that are insecure avoidant attachment act in the strange situation
- explore freely but no proximity or secure base behaviour
No interest in where mum is - no reaction or little when their caregiver leaves - no separation anxiety
- no interest when caregiver returns - no reunion behaviour
- not anxious by appearance of stranger - low stranger anxiety
Explain insecure resistant attachment
Type c
Around 3% or British toddlers
Characterised by strong attachment and high anxiety
Caused by eg overprotective parents
What will a child with insecure resistant attachment type act in strange situation
Seek greater proximity
Explores less
Extremely upset when caregiver leaves
Huge stranger and separation distress
Resist comfort when reunited with carer
Not easily comforted
What is a strength of the strange situation
Validity
The attachment type identified by the strange situation is strongly predictive of later development
Eg babies identified as secure typically have better outcomes
In many areas from success at school to romantic relationships
Insecure resistant type associated with worse outcomes
Adult mental health problems and bullying
Results from ss are consistent later on in life increasing predictive validity
Just correlation between attachment type and outcome of life not cause
What is another strength of the strange situation ?
Interater reliability
The SS shows very good interrater reliability.
For example Bick et al (2012)looked at interrater reliability in a team of trained SS observers and found agreement on attachment type for 94% of tested babies
Attachment type of an infant identified in the SS does not depend on who’s observing them
What is another limitation of the strange situation (what does it measures)
Confounding variables rather than attachment could influence the behaviour presented in the SS.
For example the ss measures a childs response to anxiety produced by being in unfamiliar environment
however rather than main influence on anxiety being attachment Kagan 1982 suggested that temperament the genetically influenced personality of child may be more important
This shows defeats the purpose of the ss as temperament rather than attachment may be the thing that is getting observed
What is another limitation of the SS (more than 3 types)
There may be atleast one more attachment type.
Eg Main and Solomon (1986)pointed out that a minority of children display atypical attachment that do not fall in any of the types
This commonly known as disorganised attachment who display an odd mix of resistant and avoidant behaviours.
This goes against ainsworths notion that a child can only be placed in 1 of the 3 attachment types