Attachment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Attachment

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Freud/psychoanalysis: First to emphasize importance of emotional ties to mothers ... Playmates often chosen by convenience. By age 2 mutually preferred playmates seen ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Attachment


1
Attachment
  • Strong emotional bond one individual forms for
    another
  • Endures across time
  • Expressed in behaviors that promote proximity and
    contact
  • Purpose
  • Survival
  • emotional survival
  • cognitive stimulation
  • social Synchronized routines

2
Theories of Attachment
  • Freud/psychoanalysis First to emphasize
    importance of emotional ties to mothers for
    psychological development.
  • Learning theories emphasize basic drives (e.g.,
    hunger) become attached to those who meet those
    needs.

3
Harlows Study of Attachment
  • Infant rhesus monkeys were placed with two
    surrogate mothers, one made of wire and one
    covered with soft cloth
  • Milk-producing nipple was attached to either the
    wire or the cloth mother
  • Regardless of who fed, monkeys preferred terry
    cloth mom when needing comforting

4
Infant monkey fed on cloth mother
24
.
Infant monkey fed on wire mother
.
.
.
.
.
18
.
Hours per day spent with cloth mother
.
Contact Time with Wire and Cloth Surrogate
Mothers
12
.
Mean hours per day
.
6
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Hours per day spent with wire mother
0
21-25
1-5
11-10
6-10
16-20
Age (in days)
5
Harlow studies
  • Effects of Isolation
  • Attachment was based on contact comfort rather
    than feeding
  • Critical period

6
Normal Play Behaviors
7
Effects ofIsolation
8
Ethologists
  • Study biological basis of behavior (evolutionary
    context)
  • Conrad Lorenz imprinting
  • Klaus and Kennell bonding - critical period

9
Bowlby
  • Children who form attachment to adult more likely
    to survive
  • Infants become attached to those who respond
    consistently and appropriately to behaviors meant
    to elicit help and care

10
Measuring Attachment
  • Mary Ainsworth
  • Strange Situation measures quality of attachment

11
Categories of Attachment
  • Secure attachment
  • Most likely when parents respond predictably and
    appropriately ? trust
  • Sensitive and responsive parents at 3 months ?
    secure attachment at 12 months
  • Study in Netherlands secure attachment more
    likely if mother had 3 months training
    emphasizing how to respond appropriately and
    promptly

12
Categories of Attachment
  • Insecure avoidant
  • Insecure ambivalent
  • Recent 4th category disorganized

13
Separation Episode
14
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS
  • Friendship A close, mutual, and voluntary
    relationship between peers
  • Reciprocal and persist over time
  • Functions include support, companionship,
    affection, and stimulation
  • Functions change over time
  • Help children learn relationship skills

15
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONSSocial Relations
among Infants/Toddlers
  • Young infants show mutual gaze
  • By 6 months, infants interact with each other by
    babbling, smiling, and touching
  • Great individual variability among infants in
    social responsiveness
  • By 12 months, infants imitate each others
    actions and share and play together with toys

16
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS Social Relations
Among Infants/Toddlers
  • With emerging language and motor skills, toddlers
    interact with increasing complexity
  • Coordinated imitation becomes much more frequent
  • Early interactions help children learn important
    social skills
  • Playmates often chosen by convenience
  • By age 2 mutually preferred playmates seen

17
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS The
Preschool and Childhood Years
  • Social contacts increase dramatically as children
    enter school
  • Larger peer group, less adult supervision
  • Main ingredients in forming friendships are
    opportunity and similarity
  • Number of best friends increases until about
    age 11 when children become more selective

18
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS The
Preschool and Childhood Years
  • Childrens close friendships typically progress
    through three stages
  • Play-based friends (ages 3 to 7 years)
  • Loyal and faithful friends (ages 8 to 11 years)
  • Intimate friends (adolescence and beyond)

19
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS Gender
Segregation among Friends
  • Prominent feature of childrens friendships is
    gender segregation - tendency to associate with
    same sex peers
  • Occurs in every cultural setting
  • Clear preference for same-sex play partners
    evident by 2 to 3 years of age
  • Gender segregation very prominent after age 3

20
GENDER PREFERENCES IN PLAY PARTNERS
21
FRIENDSHIPS AND PEER RELATIONS Gender
Segregation among Friends
  • As consequence of gender segregation, boys and
    girls grow up in different gender cultures
  • Boys tend to play in larger groups and are more
    active and physically aggressive
  • Girls develop closer ties in smaller groups
    emphasize social closeness and sensitivity

22
SOCIAL STATUS AMONG PEERS Categories of
Popular/Unpopular Children
  • Peer nomination technique frequently used to
    measure social status in childhood
  • Five categories typically result from peer
    nominations popular, rejected, average,
    controversial, and neglected

23
SOCIAL STATUS AMONG PEERS Categories of
Popular/Unpopular Children
24
SOCIAL STATUS AMONG PEERS Categories of
Popular/Unpopular Children
  • Category of rejected children includes two very
    different subtypes
  • About 50 are considered rejected-aggressive, 20
    rejected-withdrawn
  • Controversial children receive large number of
    both positive and negative nominations
  • Associations between category and characteristics
    only correlational dont know cause and effect

25
SOCIAL STATUS AMONG PEERS Social Cognition
Model of Peer Relations
  • Ken Dodge and associates have developed a social
    cognition model to explain differences in social
    behavior
  • Consists of perceiving information in social
    setting, interpreting the situation, and then
    considering responses and enacting one
  • Related to peer popularity
  • Factors such as infant temperament and attachment
    relationships may lead to positive or negative
    patterns of social cognition

26
SOCIAL STATUS AMONG PEERS Consequences
of Peer Rejection
  • Early negative social experiences may cause
    continuing problems in later years
  • Peer rejection associated with academic
    difficulties, higher rates of delinquency,
    arrest, violence, and substance abuse
  • Often implicated in school violence
  • Withdrawn children are at greater risk for
    depression, loneliness, negative self-worth
  • Intervention programs helpful
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