Bowlby’s monotropic theory Flashcards

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1
Q

What was Bowlby’s monotropic theory?

A

Attachment is innate and provides a survival advantage

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2
Q

What is monotropy?

A

The one primary attachment is different and more important than others

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3
Q

What are social releases?

A

Innate behaviour (e.g. crying, smiling) that elicit adult responses e.g. caring

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4
Q

What is the critical period?

A

The period after birth in which babies are best adapted to form attachments

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5
Q

What is the internal working model?

A

The mental representation of the child’s first attachment

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6
Q

What are the two principles of monotropy?

A

The law of continuity and the law of accumulated separation

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7
Q

What is the law of continuity?

A

The more constant and predictable a child’s care is, the better quality the attachment is

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8
Q

What is the law of accumulated separation?

A

The effects of every separation from the primary caregiver adds up and ‘the safest dose is therefore a zero dose’

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9
Q

What effects an infant attaching?

A

The sensitivity of the primary caregiver

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10
Q

What is the internal working model a template for?

A

A template for future relationships that is based on don the infant’s primary attachment

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11
Q

What is the effect of the internal working model?

A

It creates a consistency between early emotional experiences and later relationships

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12
Q

What did Schaffer and Emerson’s find?

A

Although most babes did attach to one person at first, a significant minority formed multiple attachments at the same time

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13
Q

What was Brazelton et al. ‘s procedure>

A

They observed babies trigger interactions with adults using social releasers then researchers instructed the babies primary attachment figure to ignore the social releasers

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14
Q

What were Brazelton et al.’s findings?

A

Babies who were previously normally responsive, became increasingly distressed and some eventually curled up and became motionless

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15
Q

What was Bailey et al.’s procedure?

A

They assessed attachment relationships in 99 mothers and their infants and they measured the mothers’ attachment to their own primary attachment inure and the infants’ attachment quality

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16
Q

What were Bailey et al.’s findings?

A

Mothers with poor attachment to their own primary attachment figures were more likely to have poorly attached babies