Stages of Attachment Flashcards

1
Q

Outline Schaffer’s procedure of research into the stages of attachment in 1964

A
  • 60 infants from skilled working-class families in Glasgow studied
  • Infants and mothers visited at home every month for the first year and again at 18 months
  • Researchers asked mothers questions about protests infant showed when mother left room to measure separation anxiety
  • Also assessed infant’s stranger anxiety by recording responses to unfamiliar adults
  • Found attachment develops in stages
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2
Q

What is stage 1 of attachment?

A
  • Pre-attachment stage (Birth to 2 months)
  • Infant displays similar behaviour to both objects and humans
  • Over time, begin to prefer humans to objects
  • Learns to distinguish humans to objects (no strong preference about who cares for them)
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3
Q

What is stage 2 of attachment?

A
  • Indiscriminate-attachment (2-7 months)
  • Infants begin to recognise and prefer familiar adults
  • Accepts comfort from any adult
  • Do not usually show separation and stranger anxiety
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4
Q

What is stage 3 of attachment?

A
  • Discriminate-attachment (7 months onwards)
  • Start to display stranger and separation anxiety when separated from one particular adult (biological mother 65% of cases)
  • Formed attachment to primary caregiver
  • Not necessarily person who spends most time with infant, but person who interacts and responds to infant’s social releasers (smiling, crying) with most skill
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5
Q

What is stage 4 of attachment?

A
  • Multiple Attachments stage (9 months onwards)
  • Has multiple attachments to adults they regularly spend time with (grandparents)
  • Secondary attachments
  • 29% had secondary attachments within month of forming discriminate attachment with primary caregiver
  • Some attachments may be stronger than others and have different functions (for play or comfort)
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6
Q

What is the strength of stages of attachment?

A
  • Studied infant’s attachments in their natural environments
  • Carried out research in families own homes
  • Observations carried out by parents during activities (reported to researchers)
  • Behaviour of infants were more likely to be natural (whether they displayed separation anxiety) compared to whether they were brought into lab experiments and an artificial environment
  • Adds ecological validity of Shaffer and Emerson’s research into stages of attachment
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7
Q

What is one limitation of stages of attachment?

A
  • Difficult to apply stages of attachment to today’s society
  • Shaffer and Emerson’s research done in 1960s
  • Parental care of children changed since then
  • More women now go work, infants exposed to other caregivers at early age (more likely to develop multiple attachments earlier)
  • Questions temporal validity (how valid it is in relation to progression of time) of stages of attachment
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8
Q

What is another limitation of stages of attachment?

A
  • May not be generalisable across populations
  • Stages of attachment created on bias sample in Glasgow
  • Parenting practices may differ in other social groups (not representative of those)
  • Upper class rely on nanny, infants develop multiple attachments at earlier stage than infants in working class who are more likely to be looked after by one primary caregiver
  • Individualist cultures (specific attachment formed first with single caregiver)
  • Collectivist cultures (multiple attachments formed earlier due to family working together to look after infant)
  • Questions generalisability of stages of attachment to all infants
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9
Q

What is the final limitation of stages of attachment?

A
  • Younger infants require element of subjective interpretation
  • Babies are pretty much immobile and has poor coordination so inferences has to be made on their attachment (whether they formed and who with)
  • Limitation as it’s very difficult to make judgements about their attachments based on observations of their behaviour
  • May have incorrectly concluded that infants do not develop discriminate attachments until around 7 months due to being more immobile before and unable to express their attachment to same degree
  • Questions validity of assumptions made by Shaffer and Emerson regarding early stages of attachment
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