10.16
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Q1: What is attachment and why is it important for infant development?
Attachment is the close emotional bond between an infant and its caregiver that is essential for socio-emotional development. John Bowlby believed that attachment experiences in infancy shape one's sense of security and social relationship development throughout life. Warm social interactions during this period support growth and well-being, establishing the foundation for future emotional and social relationships.
Q2: What did Harry Harlow's experiment reveal about contact comfort in attachment?
Harlow's 1958 study with infant monkeys demonstrated that contact comfort was more critical for attachment than feeding. He provided two artificial mothers: one made of cold wire that offered food, and another covered in soft cloth. Despite the wire mother providing sustenance, infant monkeys consistently preferred the cloth mother for comfort when frightened, showing that physical closeness matters more than basic nourishment.
Q3: How did Mary Ainsworth assess attachment styles in infants?
Ainsworth developed the Strange Situation experiment, which assessed how children reacted to brief separations from and reunions with their caregivers. In this procedure, caregivers leave infants alone with a stranger and then return. Based on infants' behavior during these stages—including exploration patterns, responses to the stranger, and reactions to separation and reunion—attachment relationships are classified into distinct categories.
Q4: What characterizes secure attachment in the Strange Situation?
Securely attached infants explore the room while keeping an eye on their caregiver, return to them when a stranger enters, become upset when the caregiver leaves, and greet their return with joy. These infants rely on their caregiver as a secure base—a steady source of support during times of distress. This pattern indicates a reliable emotional bond that supports healthy exploration and comfort-seeking.
Q5: What are the differences between insecure-avoidant and insecure-anxious attachment?
Insecure-avoidant infants explore independently without referring to their caregiver, show indifference to strangers, and remain unbothered by the caregiver's departure and return. Insecure-anxious infants, by contrast, hesitate to explore without their caregiver, show distress at strangers, panic when the caregiver leaves, and display mixed emotions upon reunion—seeking comfort but resisting it. Both patterns reflect insecure emotional bonds.
Q6: What is disorganized attachment and how does it differ from other attachment styles?
Disorganized attachment is characterized by inconsistent and confused responses to toys, strangers, and the caregiver's departure and return, with the child often appearing dazed. Unlike secure or insecure-avoidant and insecure-anxious patterns, which show consistent behavioral strategies, disorganized attachment reflects a lack of coherent coping approach. This pattern suggests significant disruption in the infant-caregiver relationship.
Q7: How do attachment experiences in infancy influence later development?
According to Bowlby's theory, attachment experiences during infancy influence one's sense of security and the development of social relationships throughout life. Secure attachment during early years is crucial for future emotional and social development. The emotional bond formed between infant and caregiver establishes patterns of trust and relationship-building that extend beyond infancy into childhood and adulthood.
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