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Attachment overheads Class Notes. Attachment Theories of John Bowlby  Parent-child relationship  What happens when children are raised in relative states.

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Presentation on theme: "Attachment overheads Class Notes. Attachment Theories of John Bowlby  Parent-child relationship  What happens when children are raised in relative states."— Presentation transcript:

1 Attachment overheads Class Notes

2 Attachment Theories of John Bowlby  Parent-child relationship  What happens when children are raised in relative states of maternal separation?  Films – institutionalized children staying in hospital wards.  Three-phase separation behaviors resulted.

3 Attachment Issue: universality of stages. Stages:  Stage one: Protest  Stage two: Despair  Stage three: Detachment

4 Attachment Bowlby felt that the mother-child bond was adaptive – important for survival. Bowlby was very influenced by Karl Lorenz and his work on imprinting – innateness and adaptiveness of behaviors. Bowlby felt that attachment was innate on the part of the infant and caregiver.

5 Attachment Certain behaviors connected with attachment. Critical or sensitive period for the development of attachment. Monotrophy – main attachment figure. Model for future relationships.

6 Attachment Mary Ainsworth – conditions that activate children’s attachment systems. Strange situation – baby in an unfamiliar room with a stranger.

7 Attachment Eight episodes measured four behaviors.  Willingness to explore  Separation anxiety  Stranger anxiety  Reunion Behavior

8 Attachment Definition of attachment – put slide up here.

9 Attachment Infant Characteristics that promote Attachment:  “kewpie doll” appearance  Rooting, sucking, grasping reflexes  Cooing, babbling  Smiling  Crying  Responsiveness to social overtures

10 Attachment Infant Characteristics that make attachment difficult  Physically unattractive (e.g.) premature  Reflexes weak  Irritable, few smiles  Little pleasant vocalization  Irritating shrill  Easily over stimulated, resists or ignores social overtures.

11 Attachment Caregiver characteristics that hinder attachment  Maternal depression  Abused mother  Mother does not want baby  Mother unable to take lead in establishing interactions  Mother insensitive to infant cues and may under or overstimulate child.

12 Attachment  Several children in family  Poor marital relationship.

13 Attachment Schaffer and Emerson Stages in Social Attachment  Asocial stage – 0-6 weeks  Indiscriminate attachment stage – 6 wks to 6-7 months  Specific attachment stage – 7-9 months  Multiple attachment stage – shortly after stage 3

14 Attachment Theories of attachment:  Psychoanalytical Theory  Learning Theory  Ethological Theory

15 Attachment What does the research say about attachment?

16 Attachment Types of Attachment  Secure Attachment  Insecure Attachment (anxious / resistant)  Insecure Attachment (anxious / avoidant)  Insecure Attachment (disorganized / disoriented)

17 Attachment Ainsworth’s Caregiving Hypothesis  Quality of attachment dependent on attention, responsiveness, sensitivity.  Inconsistent caregiving leads to insecure attachment (anxious / resistant)  Impatient caregiving leads to anxious and avoidant attachment.  Abusive caregiving leads to disorganized / disoriented attachment.

18 Attachment Kagan’s Temperament Hypothesis  Quality of infant’s attachment dependent upon: Easy temperment = secure attachment Difficult temperment = insecure (anx/res) Slow to warm up temperment = insecure (anx / avoidant) Research evidence?

19 Attachment Symptoms of a reactive attachment disorder – see handout on the website. What can we do to help?  Provide highly predictable environment.  Avoid intimacy too soon.  Holding therapy?  Failure to thrive cases.  Reparenting work.


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