Attachment Flashcards

1
Q

Attachment history

A

Attachment
* An emotional bond with a specific person that is enduring across
space and time

Behaviourist View of Attachment
* Pleasure derived from food is the basis of mother-infant bond
- Food = unconditioned stimulus
- Mother = conditioned stimulus linked with food

Harry Harlow and Monkey Surrogates
* Tested whether pleasure of food or pleasure of comfort is most important to infant monkeys
* Separated monkeys from their mothers and
offered them 2 “surrogate mothers”:
- Wire “mother: with food
- Cloth “mother”: without food
*Results:
- Monkeys spent most of their time on the cloth mother
- Evidence that infants needed comfort provided by cloth mother

John Bowlby
* Psychoanalyst who studied intense emotional distress of children orphaned during WWII
* Recognized that:
- Distress due to separation from parents and not having emotional needs met
- Behaviours observed (e.g., crying, clinging,
searching) are adaptive responses to separation from an attachment figure

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2
Q

Bowlby’s Attachment Theory

A

Bowlby’s Attachment Theory
* Children are biologically predisposed to develop attachment to
caregivers as a means of increasing chances of their survival
* Development and quality of child’s attachments are highly
dependent on their experiences with caregivers
1. Attachment System Inactive: Caregiver is close, life is good
2. Separated from caregiver or bad event
3. Attachment System Active: Seek proximity
* Distress from a “threat” or separation from caregiver motivates
children to seek proximity to a caregiver

Features of an attachment system:
1. Proximity maintenance and seeking
* Children are biologically motivated to stay close to caregiver
2. Separation distress
* Children become distressed when separated from caregiver
* Activates attachment system, motivating child to seek proximity to caregiver
- E.g. Looking for caregiver, seeking physical proximity, crying, clinging
3. Safe haven
* Caregiver provides comfort and a sense of safety when child feels distressed
* Caregiver helps manage arousal through co-regulation
* Once proximity and reassurance have been achieved, attachment system deactivates
4. Secure base
* Caregiver provides a child with a sense of security from which they can explore the
environment
* Cannot explore the environment if attachment system is activated

See the graph slide 51

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3
Q

Mary Ainsworth’s Strange Situation

A

Bowlby’s graduate student
* Provided empirical evidence of attachment theory by developing the Strange Situation
procedure
- Paradigm designed to systematically assess children’s attachment to a specific caregiver

SEE GRAPHS! SLIDES 34-35
***Reaction to reunion episodes most important to assessing attachment
*Secure 60%:
-Uses parent as secure base
-Upset at separation
-Seeks parent at reunion and is easily soothed by the parent
*Insecure / Avoidant 15%:
-Readily separates to explore
-Avoids or ignores the parent when they return after separation
-Does not prefer the parent to the stranger
*Insecure / Resistant (Anxious) 10%:
-Does not separate to explore
-Wary of the stranger even when the parent is present
-Extremely upset at separation
-Not soothed by the parent and resists the parent’s attempts to soothe
*Insecure/ Disorganized 15%:
-Often freezes and dissociates
-Behaviour is confused and contradictory
-Seem to want to approach caregiver but see them as source of fear

Legacy of the Strange Situation
* Attachment styles replicated in several studies
* Attachment styles are universal with approximately the same
frequencies
* Remains standard measure of children’s attachment style
* Attachment styles in Strange Situation strongly correlated with
attachment behaviour at home

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4
Q

Determinants of Attachment Style:
1. Parenting

A
  1. Parenting
    * Correlation between parental sensitivity/support and child’s
    attachment style

Parents of Securely Attached Children
* Parents’ behaviour:
- Generally supportive/sensitive reactions to child
- Affectionate and expresses frequent positive emotions towards child
- Initiate frequent close contact with the child
* Child learns that:
- Proximity seeking is a good strategy to soothe distress
Security based strategy

Parents of Avoidantly Attached Children
* Parents’ behaviour:
- Consistently insensitive to the child’s signals
- Avoids close contact or rejects child’s bids for contact
- May be angry or impatient
* Child learns that:
- Proximity seeking is not a good strategy to soothe distress
*Deactivation of the attachment system
- Avoid proximity of caregiver when distressed and instead rely on self-soothing - Cope with distress by hiding it or avoiding situations that elicit distress
- BUT biological signs of stress when separated from caregiver

Parents of Resistantly (anxiously) Attached Children
* Parents’ behaviour:
- Inconsistently supportive/ sensitive in reacting to child’s distress
- Seems overwhelmed with caregiving
* Child learns that:
- Proximity is sometimes a good strategy to soothe distress
* “Hyperactivates” attachment system
- Hypervigilance to threat
- Excessive proximity-seeking of caregiver when distressed
- Cope with distress by heightening it
- Crying louder, throwing a tantrum, clinging

Parents of Children with Disorganized
Attachment
* Parents’ behaviour:
- Confuses or frightens child
- May be harsh or abusive
- Often struggle with severe mental health issues
* Child learns that:
- Proximity seeking often results in feeling scared
- Caregiver is extremely unpredictable and cannot be trusted

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5
Q

Determinants of Attachment Style:
2. Genetics

A
  • No evidence that specific genes are related to attachment styles
  • BUT evidence for differential susceptibility

Genetic Differential Susceptibility
* Study: Conducted in Ukrainian preschoolers
* Examined relationship between:
- Attachment
- Caregiving environment
(Raised in orphanage or with family)
* Variations in serotonin transporter gene
- Short allele = orchid (vs. Long allele = dandelion) associated with greater reactivity to stress
- Biological marker of greater sensitivity to environment
* Results: Children with at least one
S allele (vs. 2 L alleles) had:
* More attachment disorganization if
raised in institution
* BUT less attachment
disorganization if raised with family
* Suggests that genes related to
environmental sensitivity and
parenting work together to affect
vulnerability to insecure
attachment

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6
Q

Implications of attachment

A

Benefits of Secure Attachment
Children that are securely attached vs. insecurely attached:
* Are more emotionally expressive (in appropriate ways)
* Experience more positive emotion
* Are less anxious and depressed
* Are less likely to have behavioural problems, like aggression and delinquency
* Have closer relationships with peers later in childhood
* Show more empathy and helping behaviour
* Are more socially competent in general
* Do better in school
* Have more positive romantic experiences in adolescence and adulthood

One Secure Attachment is Enough
* Having at least one secure attachment seems to buffer against the
negative effects of insecure attachment
* Children with insecure attachment to both parents had more behaviour
problems than children with insecure attachment to just one parent

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7
Q

Internal Working Models

A

Internal Working Models
* Mental representations of the self, of attachment figures, and of
relationships in general
* Constructed as a result of experiences with caregivers
* Once constructed,
- Act as a filter through which interactions with the caregiver and other
attachment figures are interpreted
- Guide expectations about relationships throughout life
- Guide child’s behaviour in interactions

MODEL OF OTHERS
Can others be relied on for support?
positive or negative
MODEL OF SELF
Am I worthy of love?
positive or negative
See where they are on the graph:
-Secure: positive positive
Expect relationships to be
rewarding, comfortable with closeness, and feel worthy of love
-Resistant/ Anxious: positive negative
Strong need for closeness but
worried about rejection because
“not good enough”
-Avoidant: negative positive
Disinterested in closeness and
intimacy but very self-reliant
-Disorganized: negative negative
Distrustful of others but also
sees self as deserving of rejection

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8
Q

Summary

A
  • According to Bowlby, attachment is biologically based and rooted in evolution
  • Using the Strange Situation, children can be classified into 4 attachment styles:
    secure, avoidant, resistant, disorganized
  • Attachment styles are primarily shaped by experiences with caregivers
  • Secure attachment is associated with sensitive, responsive parenting
  • But, research also shows that children are differentially susceptible to negative
    parenting
  • Attachment style has a profound impact on children’s social and emotional
    development
  • Secure attachment is associated with many positive outcomes
  • The quality of children’s attachments shape their internal working models which
    guide their expectations and behaviours in relationships throughout life
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9
Q

Does daycare interfere
with attachment?

A

Study of Early Child Care and Youth
Development (SECCYD)
* Longitudinal study conducted across 10 cities in the USA examining
the effects of daycare on attachment
* Studied 1364 children from birth to adolescence
* Measured:
- Childcare setup and quality
- Children’s attachment to mother using Strange Situation
- Quality of mother’s interactions with children
- Children’s social behaviour and cognitive development

Results of the SECCYD
* Attending childcare had no effect on attachment security
- 15-month olds in childcare were just as likely to be securely attached to
their mothers as children not in childcare
* Maternal sensitivity was the strongest predictor of children’s attachment security
* Aspects of childcare only had an effect on attachment security if child experienced “risks” in home
- Low maternal sensitivity + poor quality childcare = less secure
- Low maternal sensitivity + high quality childcare = more secure

Implications
* Childcare does not undermine parent-child attachment security
* Childcare can compensate for negative parenting experiences at
home by promoting attachment security

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