Attachment Flashcards
Define reciprocity
- responding to the action of another with a similar action
Define caregiver
- any person who is providing care for a child (parent)
Define attachment
- an emotional bond between two people
What did Brazelton suggest about caregiver and infant interactions
- regularity of an infants signals allows a caregiver to anticipate the infants behaviour and respond appropriately
Define interactional synchrony
- when two people interact they tend to mirror what the other is doing
What study is used to show interactional synchrony
- Meltzoff and Moore
- found that infants as young as 2-3 weeks old imitated specific facial and hand gestures
- they found that the behavioural response was innate
Describe the 4 stages of the development of attachment
developed by Schaffer and Emerson
1) indiscriminate attachments (similar response to all objects)
2) the beginnings of attachment (prefer human company, can distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar)
3) discriminate attachment (form a primary attachment figure, display stranger anxiety)
4) multiple attachments (develops multiple attachments, how many consistent relationships they had)
Describe the role of the father in attachment
- far less likely to be primary attachment figures
- this may be due to less time spent with the infant
- fathers are more playful
- women have the hormone oestrogen (caring)
Describe Lorenz Study for animal studies of attachment
- goose eggs incubated so first thing they saw was their natural mother (Lorenz)
- goslings imprinted on Lorenz and followed him
findings:
- if the animal is not exposed to a moving object during this time then imprinting will not happen later on
Describe Harlows Study for animal studies of attachment
- two wired mothers each with a different head, however one was additionally wrapped with cloth
- eight infant rhesus monkeys studied over 165 days
- for four of the monkeys the milk bottle was with the clothed mother and for the other four it was with the plain wired mother
- observations made on the time spent with each mother and also how they reacted when they were frightened
- all 8 monkeys spent most of the time with the cloth mother wether or not milk bottle was attached
- develop attachments with not only mothers who feed them but mothers who comfort them as well
- all motherless monkeys were socially abnormal and sexually abnormal
What are the three theories of learning
-state that all behaviours are learnt rather than innate
classical conditioning
operant conditioning
social learning theory
describe classical conditioning
- A neutral stimulus (mother) that has no response is paired to a unconditioned stimulus (food) that has a response of pleasure
- with these two together it eventually produces a conditioned response
Describe operant conditioning
- reduction of discomfort is rewarding (negative reinforcement
- the behaviour that led to the escape of discomfort is more likely to be repeated in the future as it was rewarding
- the thing that directly reduces the discomfort is seen as the primary reinforcer (food)
- something that is involved in reducing the discomfort is seen as the secondary reinforcer (mother who gives food)
Describe the social learning theory
- learning through observation of others and imitating rewarding behaviour
Define the critical period
- attachment from around 3-6 months, after this period forming attachments can become increasingly difficult
Define the term social releaser
- behaviour or characteristic that elicits caregiving and leads to attachment