ATTACHMENT PART II Flashcards
determinants of attachment: Lived experiences
○ Lived experiences: what happens to us in life
-Bowlby looked at separation anxiety (children being separated from parents)
maternal sensitivity and attachment security
• CAREGIVER SENSITIVITY: pays attention to the baby’s cues and responds back
-Managing one’s feelings and desires with baby in mind
- Awareness of infant’s signals
- Accurate interpretation of signal
- Timely responsiveness to signals
-Appropriateness of response
–A subsequent meta-analysis based upon data from more than 4,000 infants and their mothers who participated in 66 investigations yielded a reliable effect size of .22 (DeWolff & van Ijzendoorn, 1997).
○ The more sensitive the mothers are the more likely a child will be securely attached
-The less sensitive the mothers are the more likely a child will be insecurely attached
sensitive fathers + father involvement creates ?
secure attachment in child
Brown, Mangelsdorf & Neff (2012) measured attachment security at age 3 (using a method other than the SS—the AQS/observers) to see how two different aspects of fathering related to security of attachment to father.
Results revealed an interaction between the two fathering measures:
-while attachments were more secure when fathers were more sensitive, a high level of involvement could compensate for a low level of sensitivity.
Bakermans-Kranenburg, Van IJzendoorn & Juffer (2003) (23 studies)
○ Those who got the intervention vs the control group that promotes sensitivity turned out more sensitive
-Those whose parents got the intervention to foster sensitivity turned out to be more sensitive
but LESS IS MORE
○ Use to promote secure attachment in parents
-Targeting the parent not the parenting
Causal Effects of Sensitivity on Attachment Are Modest in Magnitude;
- The theory suggests a stronger impact than the evidence supplies. But why?
- Moderating conditions: there are other factors that need to be taken into consideration
But what about differential susceptibility?
We are shaped by our experiences
We are shaped by our experiences
determinants of attachment
- heritability
- lived experiences
- experimental evidence
- differential susceptibility
By what developmental processes and through what developmental mechanisms should early attachment come to be related to later psychological/behavioral functioning?
- Bowlby’s key contributions
- internal working model of self and others
internal working model
- Internal = self
- Working = not fixed hence influenced along the way
- Model: how I know and think of the world
-Kid 1: act first then ask questions later = insecure child (others can’t be trusted)
□ Been treated badly at home —> doesn’t like school —> creates negative encounters at school –> gets in trouble —> negative emotions develop —> reinforcers internal working model that everyone is bad = more trouble forming relationships later on
-Kid 2: think first then act —> I am love, accidents happen = secure child
the internal working model sees the child as an _____ agent
active
- memory and attention
- social information processing
By what developmental process and through what developmental mechanisms should early attachment come to be related to later psychological and behavioral functioning?
transactional probabilistic processes
attachment as protective factor
○ Protective factor in the safe of adversity
- Being secure buffers an individual from adversity
- Prevents an individual from succumbing , HOWEVER does not protect from everything