what is reciprocity?
when infant or caregiver responds to the other eliciting a response from them e.g a caregiver says something causing the infant to smile causing the parent to laugh.
what is interactional synchrony?
when caregiver and infants actions or emotions mirror each other
what are ‘alert phases’
Phases where the infant signals it is ready for interaction. Mothers pick up and act on this 2/3 of the time (Feldman and Eidelman) but it can vary based on skill of the mother and external factors like stress (finegood et al)
what was Meltzoff and Moore’s research into interactional synchrony?
What was Isabella’s research into interactional synchrony?
Evaluate caregiver infant interactions
+ use of recording in a lab
> confounding variables can be controlled
> video can be replayed and analysed later
> infants don’t know they’re being recorded so won’t change their behaviour.
- difficult to interpret infant behaviour
> we don’t know what they’re thinking
- low explanatory power
> Feldman - we don’t know that reciprocity and interactional synchrony are important to development
CA Isabelle et al found interactional synchrony predicted development of good attachments
Who came up with the four stages of attachment?
Schaffer and Emerson
what are the four stages of attachment?
stage 1: Asocial stage
- babies have similar attitudes towards objects and humans
- show a preference for familiar people
stage 2: indiscriminate attachment
- 2-7 months
- show a definite preference for humans
- prefer familiar people but accept comfort from anyone
stage 3: specific attachment
- around 7 months
show preference for one person
- show signs of separation anxiety and stranger anxiety
stage 4: multiple attachments
- shortly after stage 3
- form attachments with more people who they spend a lot of time with
- 29% of children form multiple attachments within 1 month of stage 3
what was Schaffer and Emerson’s research into the four stages of attachments?
evaluate the four stages of attachment
+participant researcher
> most observations were done in everyday situations during ordinary activities
> high external validity
CA: > mothers may be biased about their children or may not notice some behaviours
- we may not see signs of anxiety in young infants
> because infants can’t communicate or really move so may be anxious but we can’t tell
+ practical application
>the research can help parents make informed decisions about how to comfort their infant and when to make some bigger decisions like when to send them to nursery
what did schaffer and Emerson find about attachment to fathers in their longitudinal study?
> Father was the sole first object of attachment 3% of the time
Father was joint first object of attachment 27% of the time
75% of cases an attachment has been formed with the father by 18 months
what was Grossman et al’s research into the role of the father and findings?
what was Field’s research into the role of the father and findings?
evaluate the role of the father
what was Lorenzo’s research into imprinting and findings?
What is Harlow’s research into attachment and findings?
evaluate animal studies
+ research support for lorenzo’s imprinting
> Regolin and Vallortigara did a similar experiment with chicks and shape combinations
+ Harlow’s research has real world application
> helps social workers and clinical psychologists understand the importance of attachment figures and the risks if an infant doesn’t bond with anyone
- both lack generalisability
> humans are not mokey’s or geese so may act differently
- ethical issues
> protection from harm, concent, withdrawal ect
Who proposed the learning theory of attachment?
Dollard and Miller
what is classical conditioning in attachment?
food (US)= happy baby (UR)
Mother (NS)= neutral baby (UR)
food+mother= happy baby (UR)
Mother(CS)= happy baby (CR)
what is operant conditioning in attachment?
Mother and baby reinforce each other:
Baby cries and gets comforted. Baby is positively reinforced to cry for mothers attention for the reward of comfort
Mother is negatively reinforced to comfort the baby to avoid the punishment of it crying
what is attachment as a secondary drive?
Children are born with innate biological motivators (primary drives) e.g. the drive to eat when we’re hungry. The mother reduces that drive (e.g. by feeding them) so becomes associated with the reduction of that drive (drive reduction theory). Attachment is therefore a secondary drive as it is secondary to and a result of the biological motivators.
Evaluate the learning theory of attachment
-conflicting evidence (animal studies)
> Lorenzo’s research they imprinted regardless of association with food
> Harlow’s research they would go to the cloth mother even if it wasn’t what was feeding them
+ conditioning may play a role
> feeling comfortable and safe in the presence of a particular adult may influence the choice of attachment
CA: Both CC and OC have the baby play a passive role
> Feldman and Eidelman: they play an active role in reciprocity and interactional synchrony
+ social learning theory
> Hay and Vespo: Parents model and reward attachment behaviour
what is Bowlby’s monotropic theory?
He put great emphasis on attachment to one caregiver (the mother though not necessarily the bio mother or female). he had two principles:
the law of continuity: the more consistent and predictable the child’s care, the higher the quality of their attachment
The law of accumulated separation: Every little separation and the effects add up and the safest dose is a zero dose
what are social releasers?
Innate ‘cute’ behaviour like cooing, smiling, ect. that encourages adult attention and activates adult social interaction
Attachment in reciprocal and hard-wired into mother and infant