Theory of Attachment (Bowlby) - ATTACHMENT Flashcards
what are the ideas in the learning theory based off
the behaviourist approach
what do behaviourists believe
that we are born as ‘blank slates’ and that everything can be explained in terms of experiences we have
what do behaviourists tend to focus on
they focus on explanations of behaviour (what people do) rather than what’s going on in minds
how do behaviourists argue that all behaviour is learnt
through classical and operant conditioning
what does conditioning mean
to learn
what does the theory attachment suggest about children’s attachment
that children learn to love whoever feeds them
steps in classical conditioning for attachment
STEP 1: food (UCS) –> baby feels pleasure (UCR to food)
mother (NS) –> baby doesn’t respond (no response)
STEP 2: mother (NS) + food (UCS) –> baby feels pleasure (UCR to food)
STEP 3: mother (CS) –> baby feels pleasure (CR to mother)
steps in classical conditioning for a phobia of snakes
STEP 1: bite (UCS) –> fear (UCR)
snake (NS) –> person doesn’t respond (no response)
STEP 2: snake (NS) + bite (UCS) –> fear (UCR to bite)
STEP 3: snake (CS) –> fear (CR to snake)
what is operant conditioning
learning to repeat, or not, behaviour depending on it’s consequences
(if behaviour produces pleasant consequence, likely to be repeated - been reinforced)
what is positive reinforcement
increases the likelihood of a behaviour being repeated because it involves a reward for the behavior
what is negative reinforcement
increases the likelihood of a behavior being repeated because it involves the removal of, or escape from unpleasant consequences
positive reinforcement example (baby and mother)
baby performs action: cries –> baby receives reward: food relieves hunger
- the reward REINFORCES the action, so the baby REPEATS it
negative reinforcement example (baby and mother)
baby cries and mum performs action: feeding and cuddling –> mum receives reward: baby stops crying
- the removal of distress REINFORCES the action, so the mum REPEATS it
what did Dollard and Miller (1950) say about conditioning and attachment
drive reduction - argues when we feel discomfort, it creates a drive to reduce it
what is a primary reinforcer
something that directly supplies a reward