Introduction To Attachment Flashcards
What is an attachment?
An attachment is a long-enduring emotionally meaningful tie to a particular individual. It is a two way process (reciprocal).
What are the three signs of attachment?
Proximity seeking, stranger anxiety, separation anxiety.
What is proximity seeking?
Wanting to be close to the attachment figure.
What is stranger anxiety?
Distress when in the company of unknown people.
What is separation anxiety?
Distress when apart from the attachment figure.
What is reciprocity?
A description of how two people interact. Mother-infant interaction is reciprocal in that both infant and mother respond to each other’s signals and elicit a response from each other. Reciprocity occurs when the infant and adult respond to each other’s actions with a similar action.
What is interactional synchrony?
Mother and infant reflect the actions and emotions of the other and do so in a coordinated way. The mother and infant tend to mirror what the other is doing in terms of facial and body movements. This includes imitating the emotions as well as behaviours.
What have traditional views of childhood seen the baby’s role as?
Traditional views of childhood have seen the baby in a passive role, receiving care from an adult. More recent research however has suggested that the baby plays a much more active role - particularly in terms of interaction with its parent/caregiver.
What does interaction between a caregiver and an infant serve to do?
Interaction between a caregiver and an infant serves to develop and maintain an attachment bond between them.
What is one feature of reciprocity?
Turn-taking, for instance the adult will provide verbal communication and the baby will respond accordingly, say, by gurgling.
What study provided evidence for reciprocity in infant-caregiver interaction?
Murray and Trevarthan
Describe Murray and Trevarthan’s study
The study demonstrates how the infant takes an active role in these interactions by deliberately interfering with the interactional turn taking.
The mother verbally communicates and interacts with the infant ‘turn-taking’ and then stops the interaction by adopting a frozen face.
The baby became extremely upset and tried to draw the mother back into the conversation.
This suggests that a child does take an active role in interaction by deliberately trying to engage in the turn taking.
Give another feature of reciprocity
Imitation
What study provides evidence for imitation in infant-caregiver interaction?
Melzoff and Moore
Describe Melzoff and Moore’s study
Infants were presented with one of three facial expressions and one of three distinctive gestures, such as a hand movement. A dummy was placed in the infant’s mouth to prevent any movement before and during the presentation by the adult model. After presentation of the behaviour by the adult, the dummy was removed and the child’s immediate response was recorded and the child’s immediate response was recorded on a close-up video. Independent judges that rated the infant’s response for likeness to any of the four target behaviours (they were not told which expression/movement the child had just seen)
There was a significant association between the model’s expression or gesture and the action produced by the baby. The babies were able to closely imitate specific facial expressions or hand movements.
The study shows that very young children will imitate facial expressions and hand movements showing that they are innately social media. They play an active role in interaction through reciprocity and imitation.