Animal studies of attachment Flashcards

1
Q

What are animal studies?

A

Research studies carried out on non-human animal species, for ethical or practical reasons

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2
Q

What was Lorenz’s imprinting study procedure?

A
  • Divide large clutch of goose eggs
  • Half hatched with mother goose
  • Half hatched in an incubator (Lorenz= first moving object they saw)
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3
Q

What were Lorenz’s findings from his imprinting study?

A
  • Incubator group followed Lorenz everywhere vs control group, who followed mother
  • Imprinting= bird species that are mobile from birth attach to and follow the first moving object they see
  • Identified a critical period in which imprinting needs to take place (as brief as a few hours after birth)
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4
Q

What was Lorenz’s procedure and findings for his sexual imprinting research?

A
  • Imprinting between peacock and tortoise
  • The peacock had undergone sexual imprinting (only directed courtship towards tortoise)
  • Found that birds that imprinted on a human would later display courtship behaviour towards humans
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5
Q

STRENGTH:
I- Research support

LORENZ’S RESEARCH

A

D- Regolin and Vallortigara= chicks were exposed to simple shape combinations that moved. Range of shape combinations were moved in front of them, and they followed the original most closely
E- Supports view that animals are born with an innate mechanism to imprint on a moving object

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6
Q

Limitation:
I- Generalisability to humans

LORENZ’S RESEARCH

A

D- Hard to generalise findings and conclusions from birds to humans as mammalian attachment system is different and more complex than that in birds. Mammals= two-way process
E- Means it is inappropriate to generalise Lorenz’s findings to humans

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7
Q

Evaluation extra:
Applications to understanding human behaviour

LORENZ’S RESEARCH

A

STRENGTH:
- Humans accquire some behaviours by means of imprinting (explains why many prefer the first computer system they use)

LIMITATION:
- Humans don’t form primary attachments to first moving object, so imprinting may be of limited value when applied to human attachment development

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8
Q

What was Harlow’s contact comfort research procedure?

A
  • Reared 16 baby rhesus monkeys with two wire model ‘mothers’
  • In one condition, milk was dispensed by the plain-wire mother whereas in the second condition, the milk was dispensed by the cloth-covered mother
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9
Q

What were Harlow’s contact comfort research findings?

A
  • Baby monkeys cuddled the cloth-covered mother vs plain-wire mother, and took comfort here despite which mother dispensed milk
  • 22 hours a day, monkeys seeked comfort in the cloth-covered mother
  • ‘Contact comfort’ was more important to the monkeys than food
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10
Q

What was Harlow’s procedure and findings for his maternaly deprived monkey research?

A
  • Followed monkeys who had been deprived of a ‘real’ mother into adulthood, to see if maternal deprivation had a permenant effect
  • Deprived monkeys were typically more aggressive, less sociable, and bred less often than other monkeys
  • When they became mothers, some deprived monkeys neglected their young, some attacked their children, even killing them in some cases
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11
Q

What did Harlow find to be the critical period for normal development?

A

Mother had to be introduced within 90 days for an attachment to form

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12
Q

Strength:
I- Real world value

HARLOW’S RESEARCH

A

D- Helped social workers/clinical psychologists to understand that a lack of bonding may impact development. Allows professionals to intervene and prevent poor outcomes (Howe). Helps us understand the importance of attachment figures for baby monkeys in zoos and breeding programmes
E- Means value of research is not just theoretical but also practical

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13
Q

Limitation:
I- Generalisability to humans

HARLOW’S RESEARCH

A

D- Rhesus monkeys are more similar to humans than Lorenz’s birds, and all mammals share some common attachment behaviours. But, the human brain and human behaviour is more complex than that of monkeys
E- May be inappropriate to generalise findings to humans

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14
Q

Evaluation extra:
Ethical issues

Harlow’s research

A

LIMITATION:
- Stressful for monkeys (long-term stress)

STRENGTH:
- Pratical applications have benefiited large numbers of animals and humans, so may be justified

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