Attachment Flashcards
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Feldman and Edelman (2007)
Found mothers responded to theirs babies two thirds of the time.
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Brazelton (1975)
Describes that active involvement was a ‘dance’ because each partner responds to the others movements
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Feldman (2007) (IS)
Decided that interactional y synchrony can be defied as ‘the temporal co-ordination of micro-level social behaviours’
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Meltzoff and Moore (1977)
Observed the beginnings of interactional synchrony in babies asa young as two weeks old.
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Isabella (1989)
Observed 30 mothers and babies together and assessed the degrees of synchrony along with the quality of mothers infant attachment. High levels of synchrony were associated with high levels of mother-infant attachment.
Caregiver-infant interactions-
Feldman (2012)
Stated that a synchrony, and therefore reciprocity, simply gives names to patterns of behaviour. They can be reliably observed, but may not be useful in understanding child development.
Schaffers stages of attachment-
Schaffer and Emerson (1964)
Involved 60 babies: 31 boys and 29 girls (From skilled working class families). Researchers visited every month for a year, then again at 18 months.
Asked about the king of protest the infants showers in 7 everyday separations, (adult leaving the room). Aimed to measure babies attachments.
Identified four distinct stages of attachment, within the development.
The role of the father-
Grossman (2002)
Longitudinal study, infants attachments were studied into their teens. Looked at both parents behaviour, and its relationship between the quality of the infants later attachment.
Quality of attachments with mothers was more important when deciding future attachments. Suggested fathers attachment was less important.
He found that the quality of fathers play was more important in how their attachment developed.
The role of the father-
Field (1978)
Filmed 4 month old babies in face-to-face interactions with primary caregiver mothers, secondary caregiver fathers, primary caregiver fathers.
Primary caregiver fathers, like primary caregiver mothers, spent more time smiling, cooing, and holding babies that’s secondary caregiver fathrs. (All part of reciprocity and interactional synchrony)
The role of the father-
McCallum and Golombok (2004)
Showed children of single parent households, and lesbian parent households, do not develop differently than children in two parent heterosexual households.
Animal studies of attachment-
Lorenz (1952)
Researched geese. Randomly divided a large clutch of goose eggs, half were hatched with the mother (and the mother was the first thing that they saw), the other half was hatched in an incubator (and Lorenz was the first thing that they saw).
When the control group and the experimental group were mixed, each group followed their perspective parental figure.
Animal studies of attachment-
Lorenz (1952) (SI)
Studies a peacock who was raised with giant tortoises, and later in life the peacock only showed courting behaviours to giant tortoises, not other peacocks
Animal studies of attachment- H-
Harlow (1958)
Used 16 baby monkeys. There were two model mothers. Two conditions: in condition 1, the wire mother fed the babies, in condition 2 the cloth mother fed the monkeys.
The babies preferred the cloth mother over the wire mother and sought the comfort when they were scared.
Animal studies of attachment- H-
Harlow (1958) (MDiA)
Found that maternal deprivation had a permanent effect the monkeys were more aggressive and less sociable.
Animal studies of attachment- L-
Regolin and Vallortigara (1995)
Used a similar study with chicks, chicks were shown an combination of different shapes, the chicks followed the first one most closely
Animal studies of attachment- H-
Howe (1998)
Used Harlows research to help social workers and clinical psychologists. Found the poor effects of maternal deprivation on the monkeys.
EoA- learning theory-
Dollard and Miller (1950)
Created the learning theory of attachment.
EoA- learning theory-
Sears (1957)
Suggested that, as caregivers supply food, the primary drive if hunger becomes generalised to them. Attachment is the secondary drive, learned by association between the caregiver and the satisfaction of the primary drive.