Attachment Flashcards

(131 cards)

1
Q

What is the definition of attachment?

A

an emotional bond between two people. It is a two-way process (reciprocal) that endures overtime. It leads to certain behaviours such as clinging, proximity seeking, and serves the function of protecting an infant.

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2
Q

What is the definition of proximity?

A

Staying physically close to those whom they attached

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3
Q

What is the definition of separation distress?

A

When an attachment figure leaves their presence

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4
Q

What is the definition of secure base behaviour?

A

Even when independent of our attachment figures, we tend to make regular contact with them

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5
Q

What is the definition of interactional synchrony?

A

When two people interact, they tend to mirror what the other person is doing in terms of the facial and body movement. This includes imitating emotions and behaviours described as synchrony when (two or more) things make the same pattern

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6
Q

What is the definition of reciprocity?

A

Caregiver infant interaction is a two way/mutual process. Each party responds to the others signals to sustain interaction (turn taking). The behaviour of each party elicits a response from the other.

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7
Q

What do babies’ periodic ‘alert phases’ signal?

A

that they are ready for interaction

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8
Q

According to Feldman and Eidelman (2007), how often do mothers typically pick up on and respond to infant alertness?

A

around two-thirds of the time

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9
Q

What did Brazleton et al. (1975) find?

A

that both the mother and child can initiate interactions and they appear to take turns doing so

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10
Q

Why is Brazleton et al.’s research not fully practical?

A

some mothers might give more/less interaction/quality

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11
Q

What did Isabella et al. (1989) study/observe?

A

Observed 30 mothers and infants together and assessed the degree of synchrony and also the quality of mother-infant attachment. High levels of synchrony were associated with better quality mother-infant attachment

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12
Q

What did Isabella et al. (1989) find?

A

That securely attached mother-infant pairs had shown more instances of interactional synchrony in first year of life

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13
Q

Key study

How did Melzoff and Moore (1977) carry out their investigation?

A
  • Melzoff & Moore used a controlled observation.
  • they selected four different stimuli (3 faces + 1 hand gesture) and observed the behaviour of infant’s response - responses were watched on videotapes in real time, slow motion, and framed by frame if needed
  • independent observers (no knowledge of what observers had seen) judged the videos - double blind procedure - reduces investigators effects/researcher bias
  • each observer scored the tapes twice - intra-observer + inter-observer reliability could be calculated
  • all scores were above 0.92 (i.e. good inter/intra-observer reliability)
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14
Q

What is intra-observer reliability?

A

consistency within the same observer

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15
Q

what is inter-observer reliability?

A

consistency between different observers

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16
Q

what is stages of attachment?

A

many developmental theories identify a sequence of qualitatively different behaviours lined to specific ages. In stages of attachment some characteristics of the infant’s behaviour towards others change as that infant gets older

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17
Q

what is specific attachment?

A

showing signs of special preference for a single attachment figure, usually the mother. The baby looks to particular people for security, comfort and protection

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18
Q

what is multiple attachments?

A

attachments to two or more people. Most babies appear to develop multiple attachments once they have formed one true attachment to a main carer

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19
Q

what is separation anxiety?

A

distress levels increase when separated from an attachment figure, degree of comfort is needed upon return

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20
Q

what is stranger anxiety?

A

the anxiety response to the arrival of a stranger. An infant’s response to an unfamiliar adult

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21
Q

key study

what was the aim of Schaffer and Emerson’s (1964) study?

A

to assess whether there was a pattern of attachment formation that was common to all infants. To identify and describe the distinct stages by which attachment develops

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22
Q

key study

what was the procedure of Schaffer and Emerson’s study?

A
  • a longitudinal study on 60 new born babies (31 male, 29 female) and their mothers from a working-class area of Glasgow
  • studied at monthly intervals for first year of life, then again at 18 months
  • babies’ interactions with carers were observed in their homes, and carers interviewed about babies’ responses
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23
Q

Key study

What improved Schaffer and Emerson’s study’s reliability and validity?

A

triangulation - interviews and observations, i.e. more than one researcher method

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24
Q

key study

what did Schaffer and Emerson (1964) find as evidence for the development of an attachment?

A

that the baby showed separation anxiety after a carer left, and stranger anxiety when a researcher
approached

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25
# key study what are the 4 stages of attachment according to Schaffer and Emerson?
1) asocial 2) indiscriminate attachment 3) specific / discriminate attachment 4) multiple attachments
26
Key study What is stage 1 of attachment according to Schaffer and Emerson?
asocial stage (first few weeks) —babies behaviour towards non-human objects and humans is quite similar. Not really asocial as bay is forming bonds with carers but Schaffer and Emerson used this term
27
key study What is stage 2 of attachment according to Schaffer and Emerson?
Indiscriminate attachment (2-7 months) - The new born is predisposed to attach to any human. Most babies respond equally to any caregiver. They do not show separation or stranger anxiety
28
Key study What is stage 3 of attachment according to Schaffer and Emerson?
Specific/Discrimination attachment (after 7 months) - special preference for a single attachment figure. The baby looks to particular people for security, comfort and protection. It shows fear of strangers and unhappiness when separated from a special person. Some babies show stranger fear and separation anxiety much more frequently and intensely than others, but nevertheless they are seen as evidence that the bay has formed an attachment. This has usually developed by one year of age.
29
key study what is stage 4 of attachment according to Schaffer and Emerson?
Multiple attachments - soon after the main attachment is formed, the infant also develops a wider circle of multiple attachments depending on how many consistent relationships he/she has had. The baby becomes increasingly independent and forms several attachments. By the age of about 1 year the majority of infants had developed multiple attachments. At 18 months 87% had at least two attachments, with 31% having five or more attachments. 29% of infants’ prime attachment was not to the main carer. The mother was the main attachment figure for 65% of the children at 18 months old, and in a further 30% the mother was the first joint object of attachment. Fathers were rarely the first solo object of attachment (3%), but 27% of them were the joint first object.
30
Key study What difference did Schaffer and Emerson find between strongly and weakly attached infants with mothers?
Strongly attached infants had mothers who responded to their needs quickly and gave more opportunities for interaction. Weakly attached infants had mothers who responded less quickly and gave fewer opportunities for interaction.
31
key study What Schaffer and Emerson’s conclusions? What did they call this?
there is a pattern of attachment formation common to all infants, which suggests the process is biologically controlled. The results of the study indicated that attachments were most likely to form with those who responded accurately to the baby’s signals, not the person they spent the most time with. They called this sensitive responsiveness.
32
key study What is the most important fact in forming attachments according to Schaffer and Emerson?
the most important fact in forming attachments is not who feeds and changes the child but who plays and communicates with him or her. Multiple attachments are the norm and of similar quality, which opposes Bowlby’s idea that attachments are a hierarchy of one prime attachment and other minor attachments. Schaffer commented that there is nothing to suggest that mothering cannot be shared by several people.
33
what is social-desirability?
answering/responding in a way you think is socially acceptable E.g. mothers saying they absolutely take care of their child/ren
34
what did the Grossman study suggest about the role of the father?
1) mother-infant attachment leads to good parent-teen relationship 2) father-infant attachment does not necessarily lead to good parent-teen relationship, but they have different role e.g. play/stimulation
35
is there a biological difference for the role of the father?
women have more oestrogen than men. This hormone underlies caring behaviour in women and the lack of oestrogen in men might explain why why they are unable to form a close attachment
36
what did Hardy (1999) find about the role of fathers?
that fathers were less able to detect low levels of infant distress in comparison to mothers
37
how are fathers as primary caregivers?
they can respond to the infant’s needs and be nurturing, just like mothers E.g. smiling, imitating and holding baby
38
what procedure did Field (1978) to study fathers as primary caregivers?
filmed 4-month-old babies with primary caregiver mothers, secondary caregiver fathers, and primary caregiver fathers. Key to attachment relationship is the level of responsiveness, not gender. Fathers can be the more nurturing attachment figure.
39
What did Belsky et al. (2009) find about the role of the father?
males with higher levels of marital intimacy displayed secure father-infant attachment, whereas males with lower levels of marital intimacy displayed insecure father-infant attachment
40
What is biological determinism?
behaviour is controlled by internal or external forces over which we have no control. Biological determinism refers to the idea that all human behaviour is innate and controlled
41
what are the economic implications of research into the role of the father in attachment?
- more fathers at home means they contribute less to the economy — however more mothers may return to work, contributing to the economy - changing laws for parternity leave are government-funded so affects the economy - impact on employers - gender pay gap may be reduced if parental roles are seen as more equal - early attachment research e.g. Bowlby suggests fathers should provide an economic rather than emotional function
42
What is ethology?
the scientific and objective study of non-human animal behaviour with a focus on behaviour as an evolutionary adaptive trait, under natural conditions
43
what is imprinting?
an innate readiness to acquire certain behaviours during a critical or sensitive period of development
44
What is sexual imprinting?
acquiring a template of the characteristics of a desirable mate
45
what is the critical period?
the time within which an attachment must form if it is to form at all
46
what is the critical/sensitive period in humans?
2 - 2½ years
47
Key Study What was the aim of Lorenz’s study (1935)?
to investigate the mechanisms of imprinting where the youngsters follow and form an attachment to the first large moving object that they meet
48
key study Who were the ppts of Lorenz’s study (1935)?
greylag goose eggs - randomly split into two groups
49
Key study What was the procedure of Lorenz’s study (1935)?
large clutch of greylag goose eggs randomly split into 2 batches - one was hatched naturally by the mother, the other in an incubator with Lorenz being the first large moving object the goslings encountered. The behaviour of following was recorded. Lorenz marked all the goslings so he knew which ones were hatched naturally or not, then placed them all under one upturned box. The box was removed and following behaviour recorded again.
50
key study What do Lorenz do in variations of his study? -Why?
Lorenz varied the time between birth and seeing a moving object for the first time - so he could measure the critical period of imprinting
51
key study What were the findings of Lorenz’s study (1935)?
- immediately after birth, naturally hatched goslings followed their mother, whilst incubator goslings followed Lorenz - the same applied when released from the upturned box - the incubator goslings showed no bond to their natural mother - these bonds proved irreversible -the critical period was between 4 and 25 hours after hatching - goslings imprinted onto humans would attempt to mate with humans as adults
52
Key study What were the conclusions of Lorenz’s study (1935)?
- imprinting is a form of attachment - it supports the view that having a biological basis for an attachment is adaptive as it promotes survival - humans are born immobile so therefore there is less call for them to form an attachment straight away unlike the goslings, so this develops later (8-9 months) - it supports the view that early attachment experiences do predict future bonds
53
key study Why have some of Lorenz’s findings been questioned?
Guiton et al. (1966) found that chickens imprinted onto humans a yellow glove and would later try to mate with it, however, this could be reversed I.e. imprinting is irreversible, while sexual imprinting is reversible
54
key study What was the aim of Harlow’s study (1959)?
To test learning theory by comparing attachment behaviour in baby monkeys given a wire surrogate mother producing milk with those given a soft towelling mother producing no milk
55
key study Who were the ppts in Harlow’s study (1959)?
8 rhesus monkeys
56
key study What was the procedure of Harlow’s study (1959)?
The monkeys were caged from infancy with wire mesh food dispensing and cloth-covered surrogate mothers. Harlow measured the amount of time that the monkeys spent with each surrogate mother, and the amount of time the monkeys cried for their biological mothers
57
key study What were the findings of Harlow’s study (1959)?
- monkeys showed attachment behaviours towards a cloth-covered surrogate mother when frightened, rather than a food dispensing mother - monkeys were willing to explore a room with new toys when the cloth-covered surrogate was present, but displayed phobic responses only when the food dispensing surrogate was present - monkeys that were brought up in a social environment developed into healthy adults, whilst monkeys in isolation all displayed dysfunctional adult behaviour
58
key study How did monkeys brought up in isolation show dysfunctional adult behaviours in Harlow’s study?
- being timid - unpredictable with other monkeys - they had difficulty mating - the females were inadequate mothers
59
key study What were the conclusions of Harlow’s study (1959)?
- rhesus monkeys have an innate, unlearned need for for contact comfort - attachment concerns social security more than food - contact comfort is associated with lower levels of stress and more willingness to explore - i.e. emotional security - it supports the view that early attachment experiences predict long-term social development
60
What is learning theory?
a set of theories from the behaviourist approach to psychology, that emphasises the role of learning in the acquisition of behaviour
61
what is classical conditioning?
learning by association. Occurs when 2 stimuli are repeatedly paired together - an unconditioned stimulus and a new ‘neutral’ stimulus. The neutral stimulus eventually produces the same response that was first produced by the unlearned stimulus alone.
62
what is operant conditioning?
a form of learning in which behaviour is maintained by its consequences. Possible consequences of behaviour include positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement and punishment.
63
what is cupboard love theory?
learning theory Dollard and Miller (1950) proposed the caregiver-infant attachment can be explained by learning theory. Their approach is sometimes called the ‘cupboard love’ because it emphasises the importance of the caregiver as a provider of food. A child learns to love whoever feeds them.
64
what is primary drive?
innate drives (motivators) such as food and water. Primary reinforcer is food .
65
What is secondary drive?
learned drives (motivators) acquired through association with a primary drive, such as money that enables primary drives to be satisfied. Secondary reinforcer is the mother.
66
What is the process of attachment according to learning theory?
the baby must learn to form an attachment with its mother
67
what is the process of classical conditioning according to classical conditioning?
- the baby forms an association between a mother (NS) and the feeling of being happy when comforted by food (UCS) - each time the baby is fed, the mother is there too, so the baby learns to associate the mother with the pleasure of being fed - the mother (CS) stimulates the pleasure on her own without food The baby then feels pleasure (CR) when the mother is around
68
What is the process of attachment according to operant conditioning?
- the mother rewards the baby by feeding him, so associates the mother with the reward of being fed - the baby repeats any action that brings her close (to bring a feeling of happiness) - food is the primary reinforcer as it makes the baby feel comfortable again after being hungry (drive reduction) - by removing the discomfort of hunger for the baby (negative reinforcement) it reinforces the behaviour that led to its arrival - food doesn’t come without the mother, so the mother becomes the secondary reinforcer (even without bringing food) - the presence of the mother reduces any discomfort, so the bay will repeat any behaviour to bring the mother close (e.g. crying)
69
what are the 5 key assumptions of Bowlby’s theory (1969)?
adaptive, social releases, critical period, monotropy, internal working model
70
In Bowlby’s theory of attachment, how is the key assumption of adaptation explained?
- sometimes referred to as evolutionary theory - human behaviour and phenomena can be explained by the process of natural selection - attachment is a vital adaptive quality / advantage that has evolved to increase our chance of survival through proximity-seeking behaviour
71
In Bowlby’s theory of attachment, how is the key assumption of social releasers explained?
- a social behaviour or characteristic that elicited a care-giver reaction - babies are predisposed to smile, coo and grip to encourage adults to give them attention which will help them survive - attachment is a reciprocal process
72
In Bowlby’s theory of attachment, how is the key assumption of the critical period explained?
- ~2–2.5 years in humans - it is actually more of a sensitive period - if an infant doesn’t form an attachment in this time, it will fid it much harder to form one later - a child is maximally sensitive at age 2 - this is practically useful for adoption agencies and orphanages
73
In Bowlby’s theory of attachment, how is the key assumption of monotropy explained?
- places great emphasis on a child’s attachment to one (mono) particular caregiver who is different or more important than others - the more time spent with primary attachment figure, the better - the law of continuity — the more constant and predicable a child’s care, the better quality of their attachment - the law of accumulated separation — the effects of every separation from the mother add up, so ‘the safest dose is zero dose’ This is socially sensitive research
74
In Bowlby’s theory of attachment, how is the key assumption of the internal working model explained?
- attachment to primary care-giver provides a child with a schema/understanding of relationships - this acts as a template for future relationships - someone with a positive internal working model will become a consistent/sensitive/responsive caregiver; someone with a negative internal working model will become an inconsistent caregiver or neglectful
75
what is the Strange Situation (SS)?
a controlled observation designed to test attachment security. Infants are assessed on the response to playing in an unfamiliar room, being left alone, left with a stranger and being reunited with a caregiver. It is an assessment tool to measure attachment types
76
what is type B attachment?
secure attachment
77
what is secure attachment (type B)?
generally thought of as the most desirable attachment type, associated with psychologically healthy outcomes. in the SS, this is shown by moderate stranger and separation anxiety and ease and comfort at reunion.
78
what is type A attachment?
insecure avoidant attachment
79
what is insecure avoidant attachment?
an attachment characterised by low anxiety but weak attachment. in the SS, this is shown by low stranger and separation anxiety and little response to reunion - an avoidance of the caregiver
80
what is type C attachment?
insecure resistant attachment
81
what is insecure resistant attachment?
an attachment characterised by strong attachment and high anxiety. In the SS, this is shown by high levels of stranger and separation anxiety and by resistance to be comforted at reunion
82
what was the aim of Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation (1970)?
to systematically test the nature of attachment and to see how infants behave under mild stress and novelty
83
what was the procedure of Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation (1970)?
- controlled observation with one-way mirror/video recording (to allow independent observers to review the observations) - 100 middle-class, white, American mothers with their mothers - 8 episodes (3 mins each), each designed to highlight certain behaviours such as separation anxiety, reunion behaviour, stranger anxiety and secure base concept - time sampling with behavioural categories
84
what were the 8 episodes in Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation?
1. parent and infant play 2. parent sits while infant plays 3. stranger enters and talks to parent 4. parent leaves, infant plays, stranger offers comfort if needed 5. parent returns, greets infant, offers comfort if needed, stranger leaves 6. parent leaves, infant alone 7. stranger enters and offers comfort 8. parent returns, greets infant, offers comfort
85
what behaviours were being looked for in each of the episodes in Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation?
1. parent and infant play - N/A 2. parent sits while infant plays - SECURE BASE BEHAVIOUR 3. stranger enters and talks to parent - STRANGER ANXIETY 4. parent leaves, infant plays, stranger offers comfort if needed - SEPARATION ANXIETY 5. parent returns, greets infant, offers comfort if needed, stranger leaves - REUNION BEHAVIOUR 6. parent leaves, infant alone - SEPARATION ANXIETY 7. stranger enters and offers comfort - STRANGER ANXIETY 8. parent returns, greets infant, offers comfort - REUNION BEHAVIOUR
86
(findings) - what % of infants had (type B) secure attachments, and what behaviour pattern did they display in Ainsworth's Strange Situation (1970)?
- 66% - infant showed high willingness to explore, moderate stranger and separation anxiety, enthusiastic behaviour at reunion
87
(findings) - what % of infants had (type A) insecure avoidant attachments, and what behaviour pattern did they display in Ainsworth's Strange Situation (1970)?
- 22% - infant showed high willingness to explore, low stranger and separation anxiety, avoided contact at reunion
88
(findings) - what % of infants had (type C) insecure resistant attachments, and what behaviour pattern did they display in Ainsworth's Strange Situation (1970)?
- 12% - infant showed low willingness to explore, high stranger and separation anxiety, seeks and rejects at reunion
89
what was the behaviour like of mothers towards their infant for each type of attachment in Ainsworth's Strange Situation?
- secure =>sensitive and supportive - insecure avoidant => rejected/ignored infant - insecure resistant => inconsistent
90
what causes differences in attachment types, according to Ainsworth?
1) mothers who are more sensitive to the infant's moods and needs will produce babies who are securely attached, whilst the opposite is said for mothers who are less sensitive/responsive to their babies, as the infant is unsure whether their needs would be met at any time 2) children are born with innate temperamental differences, so children who have an 'easy' temperament (eat and sleep regularly and accepting of new experiences) may form more secure attachments than those who have a 'difficult' temperament (eat and sleep irregularly and reject new experiences) are more likely to form insecure relationships
91
How does Kagans’ theory of temperament affect Ainsworth’s Strange Situation?
an easy baby may show signs of secure attachment, which weakens the findings of Ainsworth’s study, as temperament could be a confounding variable
92
what does imposed etic mean?
an etic construct is a theoretical idea that is assumed to apply in all cultural groups.
93
what does emic construct mean?
an emic construct is one that applies only in one cultural group. Culture bias can occur if a researcher assumes that an emic construct is actually etic
94
who carried out cultural variations of Ainsworth's SS?
VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg (1988)
95
what was the aim of VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
to see whether inter-culture differences or intra-cultural differences exist between different cultures / countires
96
how many ppts in VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
>2000 SS classifications, from 32 studies, in 8 different countries
97
what was the method and procedure in VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
- conducted a meta-analysis of findings from studies - all used the SS - 18 were in the USA - results from meta-analysis combined and weighted for sample size
98
what were the findings of VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
- variations *between* cultures were small - secure was the most common type of attachment across all countries - insecure avoidant was 2nd most common everywhere *except* Japan and Israel (classed as collectivist at the time) - variations *within* cultures was 1.5 times greater than the variations between cultures - secure: 75% in UK, 50% in China - insecure-resistant: 3% in UK, 30% in Israel - insecure-avoidant: most common in Germany, least common in Japan
99
what were the conclusions of VanIjzendoorn and Kroonenberg's study?
- global patterns across cultures appears similar to USA - secure attachment is most common -supports idea this is 'best' for healthy social and emotional development - support view that attachment is an innate and biological process
100
who else studied cultural varitions in attachment using Ainsworth's Strange Situation?
Takahashi (1990) in Japan
101
how many ppts in Takahashi's study?
60 middle class mother and infant pairs
102
what were Takahashi's findings?
- insecure-avoidant: 0% - infants become severely distressed in 'infant alone step' - situation was unnatural and broke cultural norms for the infants - insecure-resistant: 32% - secure: 68% - 90% of infant-alone steps had to be stopped due to excessive infant anxiety
103
in attachment, what does deprivation mean?
occurs when the attachment bond is formed, but is broken later on in life
104
in attachment, what does privation mean?
occurs when a child does not form any attachment at all
105
what is Bowlby's Maternal Deprivation hypothesis (1953)?
"If an infant has prolonged separation from their mother so is unable to develop warm, intimate and continuous relationship with his/her mother (or mother substitute) before the age of 2.5 years (critical period) then the child would have difficulty forming relationships with other people and be at risk of behavioural (delinquency), cognitive (reduced intelligence), emotional (affectionless psychopathy) disorders."
106
what are the long term consequences of maternal deprivation?
- intellectual development: mental retardation, abnormally low IQ. E.g. Goldfarb (1947) found lower IQ in children who had remained in institutions as opposed to those who were fostered (higher standard of emotional care) - emotional development: affectionless psychopathy as the inability to experience guilt or strong emotion for others - prevents the person developing normal relationships and is associated with criminality - cannot appreciate feelings of victims and so lack remorse for their actions
107
what was the procedure of Bowlby's 44 thieves study (1944)?
- 44 criminal teens accused of stealing - all were interviewed for signs of affectionless psychopathy (lack of affection/guilt/empathy for victims) - family interviewed - any prolonged early separation from mothers? - control group of non-criminal teens, but emotionally disturbed - interviewed for how often maternal separation / deprivation occurred in children who weren't thieves
108
what were the findings of Bowlby's 44 thieves study?
14 / 44 thieves were affectionless thieves 12 out of these 14 had experienced prolonged separation from mother in first 2 years of life only 5 of the remaining 30 thieves had experienced separation, but not classed as affectionless psychopaths in control group, 2 / 44 had experienced long separations
109
what was the conclusion of Bowlby's 44 thieves study?
prolonged early separation / deprivation caused affectionless psychopathy
110
what other factors might affect a child's response to separation?
- age (response to short-term separation strongest between 12 and 18 months) - type of attachment (secure cope better than insecure - believe the caregiver will return) - sex (boys respond more strongly to separation than girls) - quality of substitute care (left with someone they know, e.g. grandparent, or someone who provides continuous responsive care, effects more minimal) - experience of previous separations (some might be used to being separated, e.g. playgroups or staying with relatives)
111
what is the definition of institutionalisation?
living arrangements outside the family / family home. Results in child adopting rules/norms of the institution that can impair functioning - leads to loss of personal identity, deindividuation, etc. E.g. hospital or orphanage In such places there is often very little emotional care provided.
112
what is disinhibited attachment?
type of insecure attachment where children do not form close attachments. Such children will treat strangers with inappropriate familiarity (over-friendliness) and may be attention seeking
113
what is mental retardation?
condition diagnosed before 18 (usually in infancy) includes below-average general intellectual function, and lack of skills necessary for daily living
114
who conducted the Romanian Orphan studies / English and Romanian Adoptee Study (ERA)?
Rutter and Sonuga-Barke (2010)
115
what was the aim of the ERA study?
to investigate the effects on institutionalisation upon child emotional, social and physiological development
116
what was the procedure of the ERA study?
- longitudinal study - 165 children from Romanian orphanages - 52 UK orphans who were adopted before 6 months old (control group) - assessed each child at ages 4, 6, 11 and 15 - interviews and observations - physical health on entry to UK was poor
117
what were the findings of the ERA study?
- at time of adoption, Romanian orphans were far behind British counterparts (physically, cognitively and socially - smaller, weighed less and classed as mentally retarded) - by age 4, nearly all Romanian orphans had caught up with British counterparts if adopted before 6 months old - by age 11, mean IQ of kids adopted before 6 months old was 102, between 6 months - 2 yrs was 86, after 2yrs old was 77 - these differences remained at age 16 - adopted after 6 months showed disinhibited attachment (attention seeking, clinginess, indiscriminate behaviour towards adults)
118
what were the conclusions of the ERA study?
long-term consequences may be less severe than was once thought if children have the opportunity to form attachments
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what are the effects of institutionalisation?
disinhibited attachment - (insecure) do not discriminate between people they choose as attachment figures affectionless psychopathy dwarfism intellectual under-functioning - cognitive development is affected by emotional deprivation enuresis (bed wetting) social issues poor parenting - (Quintan et al. (1984) had 50 women raised in institutions vs not, found institutionalised had extreme difficulties as parents, e.g. had more children spending time in care)
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what are classed as childhood relationships?
affiliations with other people in early childhood, including friends, classmates and adults such as teachers
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what are classed as adult relationships?
relationships the child goes on to have later on in life as an adult. E.g. friendships and working relationships, but most critically romantic relationships and with their own children
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what is the continuity hypothesis?
someone with a positive internal working model will become a consistent / sensitive / responsive caregiver; whilst someone with a negative internal working model will become inconsistent in caregiving or neglectful
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what is Kagan's temperament hypothesis?
proposes that an infant's innate personality may explain attachment behaviour - infants who have an 'easy' temperament are most likely to become strongly attached - easier to interact with them
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which theory can be used to describe/explain later/adult/child relationships?
the continuity hypothesis: Hazan and Shaver's study is said to be supportive evidence for this (and the internal working model) we would therefore expect a link between early attachments, attitudes about romantic relationships and actual romantic relationships
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Which study can be used to describe/explain relationships in adulthood (with romantic partners)? (Cannot be used for childhood relationships)
Hazan and Shaver (1987)
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What was the aim of Hazan and Shaver's 1987 study?
To test the internal working model (IWM)
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What was the procedure of Hazan and Shaver's 1987 study?
Placed a 'love quiz' in small American town newspaper Quiz asked about current attachments and attachment history to identify current and childhood attachment types and attitudes towards live and assessment of internal working model
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What did Hazan and Shaver find?
- 620 responses (205 men, 415 women) from fair cross section of population - attachment types similar to those found in infancy and SS: 56% secure, 25% insecure-avoidant, 19% insecure-resistant - positive correlation between attachment types and love experiences - secure: love is more enduring, happy and trusting (10yrs on average) - positive IWM - insecure: 6yrs on average
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Which study can be used to describe/explain relationships in childhood?
Myron-Wilson and Smith (1998)
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What did Myron-Wilson and Smith find?
(196 kids aged 7-11 from London) Secure unlikely to be involved in bullying Insecure-avoidant most likely to be victims Insecure-resistant most likely to be bullies
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What did Quintan et al. find?
Poor parenting - 50 ex-institutional women had extreme difficulties acting as parents - lack of internal working model, so individuals lack reference point ti subsequently form relationships with their own children