L18 - Attachment I Flashcards
attachment foundations, attachment in adulthood
What is Bowlby’s attachment theory?
children are biologically predisposed to develop attachment to caregivers as a means of increasing chances of their survival
attachment is crucial for children’s psychological well-being and forms the basis of personality development
Development and quality of child’s attachments are highly dependent on their experiences with caregivers
What are the main characteristics of the attachment system?
- Proximity seeking and maintenance
- Separation distress
- Safe haven
- Secure base
Describe the Strange Situation
paradigm designed to systematically assess children’s attachment to a specific caregiver
caregiver and child play in a room together
examines how children react to:
- separations from caregiver
- reunions with caregiver
- meeting a stranger
attachment styles in the Strange Situation
- Secure: 60%; children distressed when parent left, but able to be soothed by stranger and seeks comfort upon reunion with parent; explores the room when parent is present
- Avoidant: 15%; child does not display signs of distress upon separation from parent, plays by themselves, and disinterested in parent upon reunion
- Anxious/ambivalent: 10%; child extremely distressed upon separation, not soothed by stranger, but takes a long time to be soothed upon reunion with parent/resists parent’s attempt to soothe; stays close to parent when parent is in the room and doesn’t explore much
- Disorganized: 15%; behaviour is contradictory. seems to want to approach parent but also sees them as a source of fear. frequently appear dazed and dissociated
How do parents of securely attached children behave?
Parent’s behaviour:
- generally supportive/sensitive to child’s needs
- affectionate and expressed frequent positive emotions towards child
- intitiates frequent close contact with the child
Child learns that:
- proximity seeking is a good strategy to soothe distress
How do parents of avoidantly attached children behave?
Parent is consistently unavailable:
- consistently insenstive to the child’s signals
- avoids close contact or rejects child’s bids for contact
- may be angry or impatient
Child learns that:
- proximity seeking is not a good strategy to soothe distress
- Deactivation of attachment system
– attention diverted away from threat
– avoid proximity of caregiver when distressed
– cope with distress by suppressing it or avoiding situations that elicit distress
How do parents of anxiously attached children behave?
Parent’s behaviour:
- inconsistent in reacting to child’s distress
- seems overwhelmed with caregiving
Child learns that:
- proximity seeking sometimes is a good strategy to soothe distress, but not always
- hyperactivation of attachment system
– hypervigilance to threat and exaggerated perceptions of threat
– excessive proximity-seeking of caregiver when distressed
– cope with distress by heightening it
How do parents of children with disorganized attachment behave?
parent’s behaviour:
- frightens child
- may be harsh or abusic
- oten struggle with severe mental health issues
child learns that:
- proximity seeking often results in feeling scared
- caregiver is extremely unpredictable and cannot be trusted
What are other factors that influence attachment?
infant’s temperament
- infants vary in sensitivity and how easy they are to soothe
socialization of gender roles
- males are more likely to develop avoidant (vs. anxious) attachment
- female babies more likely to develop anxious (vs. avoidant) attachment
safety vs. danger of environment
- more likely to develop anxious attachment because being hypervigilant to threats is adaptive
How does attachment work in adulthood?
attachment relationships have similar functions in adulthood as they do in childhood
- proximity seeking/maintenance, separation distress, safe have, secure base
romantic partners are most common attachmnet firgures in adults
- best friends too
adult attachment style is strongly determined by childhood attachment styles due to internal working models
What are internal working models?
mental representations of the self, of attachment figures, and of relationships in general that is constructed as a result of experiences with caregivers
filter through which interactions with the caregvier and other attachment figures throughout life are interpreted
guide expectations about relationships throughout life
In the internal working models’ grid, what does the avoidance dimension measure?
discomfort with closeness and intimacy
to what extent are others reliable?
low avoidance = others are reliable
(vertical line: TOP (low avoidance) to BOTTOM (high avoidance))
In the internal working models’ grid, what does the anxiety dimension measure?
vigilance and concerns about rejection and abandonment
to what extent is the self worthy of love?
low anxiety = self is worthy of love
(horizontal line: LEFT (low anxiety) to RIGHT (high anxiety))
what is a secure internal working model?
comfortable with closeness and interdependence, but also seeks autonomy
low avoidance - low anxiety
What is a anxious internal working model?
strong need for closeness but worries tha tothers will reject them because “not good enough”
low avoidance - high anxiety
What is a dismissive-avoidant internal working model?
disinterested in closeness and intimacy and fiercely self-reliant
high avoidance - low anxiety