What is reciprocity?
Caregiver-infant interaction is reciprocal in that both caregiver and baby respond to each others signals and each elicits a response from the other
What is interactional synchrony?
Caregiver and baby reflect both the actions and emotions of the other and do this in a co-ordinated (synchronised) way
What are alert phases?
What is active involvement?
Both caregiver and baby can initiate interactions and they appear to take turns performing an active role
Describe the research on how synchrony begins
Describe the research on the importance of synchrony on attachment
AO3 for caregiver-infant interactions
1. Filmed observations: activity that might distract a baby can be controlled, observations can be recorded and analysed later, unlikely that researchers will miss key behaviours, more than one observer can record data and establish inter-rater reliability, babies not aware of observation so behaviour does not change in response, therefore research has good reliability and validity
2. Difficulty observing babies: hard to interpret babies behaviour, babies lack co-ordination and parts of their body immobile, the movements being observed are small hand movements or subtle changes in expression, difficult to determine what is taking place from baby’s perspective, cannot be certain behaviours seen in caregiver-infant interactions have special meaning
3. Developmental importance: Feldman (2012) states ideas like synchrony give names to observable caregiver and baby behaviours, robust phenomena as can be reliably observed, but not useful in understanding child development as it does not share the purpose of the behaviours, cannot be certain from observational research alone that reciprocity and synchrony are important for development
Counterpoint: Insabella et al (1989) fund that interactional synchrony predicted the development of good quality attachment
Who suggested the stages of attachment?
Schaffer and Emerson
Name the four stages of attachment
Describe the asocial stage
Describe the indiscriminate stage
Describe the specific attachment stage
Describe the multiple attachment stage
What do the stages of attachment suggest?
Different infant behaviours are linked to specific stages, and all babies go through them in the same order
Describe Schaffer and Emerson’s research on the stages of attachment
What is attachment?
A close 2 way emotional bond between two individuals in which each individual views the other as essential for their own emotional security
AO3 for stages of attachment
1. Good external validity: most observations made by parents during ordinary activities and reported to researchers, if researchers were present during observation babies may have been anxious or distracted, likely that participants behaved naturally while observed
Counterpoint: mothers unlikely to be objective observers, may have been bias, babies behaviour may not have been accurately recorded
2. Poor evidence for the asocial stage: lack of validity in measures used to assess attachment in asocial stage, young babies have poor co-ordination, babies less than 2 months may display anxiety in subtle hard-to-observe ways, difficult for mothers to observe and report back to researchers on signs of anxiety, due to flawed methods babies may seem asocial
3. Real-world application: practical application in daycare, in asocial and indiscriminate stages daycare likely to be straightforward as babies can be comforted by any adult, however daycare may be problematic during the specific stage as baby cannot be comforted by unfamiliar adults, use of daycare can be planned using the four stages
Describe Schaffer and Emersons findings on the role of the father
Describe Grossmann et al (2002) longitudinal study on the distinctive role of fathers
Describe Field’s (1978) research on fathers as primary caregivers
AO3 for the role of the father
1. Confusion over research questions: lack of clarity over question asked, ‘What is the role of the father?’ complex question, some focused on father as secondary attachment figure and tended to see fathers having a distinct role, behaving differently from mothers, whereas others more concerned with father as primary attachment figure claiming they take on a more ‘maternal’ role, difficult to answer the simple question, depends on what specific role is being discussed
2. Conflicting evidence: findings vary with methodology, Grossmann’s study suggests fathers as secondary attachment have more distinct role in development, means that those in same-sex household would develop differently, however McCallum and Golombok (2004) consistently show that these children do not develop differently than two-parent heterosexual households
Counterpoint: parents in single-mother or same-sex parent families may simply adapt to accommodate the roles played by fathers
3. Real world application: useful when offering advice to parents, some may agonise over primary caregiver decisions, mothers may feel pressured to stay at home or fathers to focus on work due to stereotypical views on roles, research can be used to offer reassuring advice, inform that fathers can become primary attachment, and same-sex/single-parent families informed that not father does not affect development, parental anxiety about role of fathers can be reduced
Describe Lorenz’s research on imprinting
What is imprinting?
When species that are mobile e.g geese or ducks attach to and following the first moving object they see
What was the critical period of imprinting suggested by Lorenz?
A time period where imprinting needs to take place (typically a few hours after birth) otherwise imprinting does not occur