Y1 Module 3 - Attachment Flashcards
What is meant by reciprocity in terms of attachment?
Mother-infant interaction is reciprocal - both infant and mother respond to each other’s signals and each elicits a response from the other.
What is meant by interactional synchrony in terms of attachment?
Mother and infant reflect both the actions and emotions of the other and so this is a co-ordinated (synchronised) way.
Describe one way in which psychologists have investigated the caregiver-infant interactions. Refer to a specific study.
Meltzof and Moore (1977) observed interactional synchrony in infants. An adult displayed 1 of 3 facial expressions or gestured and the child’s response was filmed. An association was found between adult and child behaviour.
OR: Ainsworth’s strange situation. Baby was observed for behaviours e.g. separation and stranger anxiety, exploration behaviour, reunion behaviour. Ainsworth discovered 3 distinct attachment types.
Referring to research, describe the role of the father in development.
Grossman (2002). The quality of infant attachment in adolescence was related to the quality of play with the father. The father is important in a stimulation role, rather than a nurturing role.
OR: Fathers are usually seen as the secondary caregiver (mother being primary). However, this is not to say that fathers can’t be the primary caregiver - Field (1978) found that primary caregiver fathers spent more time nurturing than secondary caregiver fathers. They can play a primary role, however it is the level of response that is important.
Outline 1 strength of research into caregiver-interaction.
Due to the controlled nature of the observations it is possible to capture fine detail of interactions. This increases validity.
Outline 1 weakness of research into caregiver-infant interactions.
Research involves observing simple gestures and expressions. It is hard to know what is happening and to assume the infant’s intention. This means we cannot be certain that the behaviours seen in mother-infant interactions are special.
Outline 2 weaknesses of research on the role of the father.
Children who grow up in the same sex or single parent households do not develop any different - suggests that the role of the father is not important. Different research questions asked in studies produce inconsistent findings - overall picture is unclear.
Outline Schaffer and Emerson’s study into the formation of early relationship.
Aimed to investigate the age of attachment formation and who they are formed with. Mothers of 60 babies from Glasgow report monthly on separation and stranger anxiety. Most babies showed attachment to a primary caregiver by 32 weeks and developed multiple attachments soon after this.
What are the 4 stages of attachment?
Asocial stage: Happier with humans, lasts the first few weeks.
Indiscriminate attachment: 2-7 months, prefer humans, some recognition.
Specific attachment: From 7 months, stanger and separation anxiety.
Multiple attachments: Shortly after specific attachment, display separation anxiety towards other caregivers, too.
Why does Schaffer and Emerson’s study have good external validity?
Because the observations took place in the participants natural environments.
What are 2 weaknesses of Schaffer’s stages of attachment?
Measuring attachment - just because a child cries when an adult leaves the room does not have to mean attachment.
Conflicting evidence - Van Ijzendoorn et al. found that in different contexts multiple attachments may come first.
What is ethology?
The study of animal behaviour.
What is imprinting?
Animals attaching to the first moving object they see.
What is the critical period?
Imprinting must occur within a few hours/days/weeks after birth.
What is sexual imprinting?
Birds show courtship behaviour towards whatever species they imprint on.
Outline Lorenz’s research into attachment.
2 groups of goslings - 1 saw Lorenz when they hatched and one saw their mother. He described imprinting and sexual imprinting.
What is the importance of contact comfort?
Animals like monkeys prefer a soft toy mother to a wire one regardless of which provides milk.
What is maternal deprivation?
Animals brought up without a mother were dysfunctional as adults.
Outline Harlow’s research into attachment.
Baby monkeys were given a cloth or a wire mother with a feeding bottle attached. He discovered the importance of contact comfort. The critical period was seen as 90 days - after this attachments wouldn’t form.
What did Harlow find out about the effect of maternal deprivation?
Maternally deprived monkeys grew up socially dysfunctional.
Describe 1 weakness of Lorenz’s research.
The research lacks generalisability. Birds and mammals have different attachment systems - so Lorenz’s research may not be relevant to humans. Mammalian mothers show much more emotion towards their young.