3.1.1

Caregiver-Infant Interaction

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The Concept of Attachment

Attachment happens when a strong emotional connection is formed between two individuals. Attachment is an important milestone for infants.

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Psychosocial development

  • Psychosocial development happens when children form relationships, interact with others, and learn to understand and manage their feelings.
  • In social and emotional development, forming healthy attachments is very important and is the major social milestone of infancy.
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Developmental psychology interest

  • Developmental psychologists are interested in how infants reach the milestone of attachment.
  • They ask questions like
    • How do parent and infant attachment bonds form?
    • How does neglect affect these bonds?
    • What accounts for differences in different children's levels of attachment?

Caregiver-Infant Interaction in Humans

Humans are born at a relatively early stage of development in comparison to other animals. This means that they need to form attachment bonds with adults so that they can be nurtured and protected.

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Attachment to caregiver

  • Attachment is often typified by an infant’s desire to seek proximity to a particular individual and to display distress when separated from this particular individual.
  • An attachment bond is not present at birth. Rather, it develops as a response to interactions between the child and the caregiver.
  • This caregiver provides the infant with a sense of security and is usually, but not always, the child’s mother.
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Communication

  • Communication between the caregiver and infant happens in many ways, for example:
    • Interactional synchrony - the infant moves their bodies in time with the rhythm of the carer's spoken language, creating a form of turn-taking.
    • Reciprocity - interactions lead to mutual behaviour between carer and infant, with both being able to produce responses from each other.
    • Mimicking - infants imitate the facial expressions of the caregiver, suggesting an innate biological drive to form an attachment bond.
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Further communication

  • Communication between infant and caregiver also happens in other ways:
    • Bodily contact - physical interactions help to form the attachment bond in the very early period, particularly, immediately after birth.
    • Caregiverese – a form of modified vocal language used by adults as they interact with infants, which includes high-pitched, song-like vocals that are slow and repetitive. These vocals help with communication between the infant and caregiver while also strengthening the attachment bond.
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Research into the impact of contact

  • Klaus and Kennel (1976) compared mothers who displayed extended physical contact with their babies with mothers who only contacted with their infants during feeding in the three days after birth.
  • After one month, the mothers who displayed greater physical contact were found to cuddle their babies more and make greater eye-contact with them than the mother who made less contact.
  • These effects were still evident a year later, suggesting that greater physical contact leads to an attachment bond that is closer and stronger.
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Further research

  • Isabella et al. (1989) found that infants with secure attachments demonstrated interactional synchrony during the first year of life.
  • Meltzoff and Moore (1977) discovered that infants aged two to three weeks displayed a tendency to mimic adults’ facial expressions and hand movements, indicating that mimicry is an innate ability that helps in the formation of attachment.
  • Papousek et al. (1991) found that the use of caregiverese was cross-cultural, suggesting that it is an innate device.
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Evaluation

  • Klaus and Kennel’s findings led to real-world effects, with hospitals placing mothers and babies in the same room in the days following birth to encourage attachment formation.
  • Durkin (1995) disputed Klaus and Kennell’s findings, claiming that they were due to the attention given to mothers who were unmarried and poor, rather than increased physical contact.
  • Chateau and Wiberg (1984) found the same results to those of Klaus and Kennel but with Swedish mothers, so disputing Durkin’s later claims.

Research on Caregiver-Infant Interaction in Humans

Humans are born at a relatively early stage of development in comparison to other animals. This means that they need to form attachment bonds with adults so that they can be nurtured and protected.

Illustrative background for Research into the effect of contactIllustrative background for Research into the effect of contact ?? "content

Research into the effect of contact

  • Klaus and Kennel (1976) compared mothers who displayed extended physical contact with their babies with mothers who only contacted with their infants during feeding in the three days after birth.
  • After one month, the mothers who displayed greater physical contact were found to cuddle their babies more and make greater eye-contact with them than the mother who made less contact.
  • These effects were still evident a year later, suggesting that greater physical contact leads to an attachment bond that is closer and stronger.
Illustrative background for Further research Illustrative background for Further research  ?? "content

Further research

  • Isabella et al. (1989) found that infants with secure attachments demonstrated interactional synchrony during the first year of life.
  • Melzoff and Moore (1977) discovered that infants aged two to three weeks displayed a tendency to mimic adults’ facial expressions and hand movements, indicating that mimicry is an innate ability that helps in the formation of attachment.
  • Papousek et al. (1991) found that the use of caregiverese was cross-cultural, suggesting that it is an innate device.
Illustrative background for EvaluationIllustrative background for Evaluation ?? "content

Evaluation

  • Klaus and Kennel’s findings led to real-world effects, with hospitals placing mothers and babies in the same room in the days following birth to encourage attachment formation.
  • Durkin (1995) disputed Klaus and Kennell’s findings, claiming that they were due to the attention given to mothers who were unmarried and poor, rather than increased physical contact.
  • Chateau and Wiberg (1984) found the same results to those of Klaus and Kennel but with Swedish mothers, so disputing Durkin’s later claims.

Jump to other topics

1Social Influence

2Memory

3Attachment

4Psychopathology

5Approaches in Psychology

6Biopsychology

7Research Methods

8Issues & Debates in Psychology (A2 only)

9Option 1: Relationships (A2 only)

10Option 1: Gender (A2 only)

11Option 1: Cognition & Development (A2 only)

12Option 2: Schizophrenia (A2 only)

13Option 2: Eating Behaviour (A2 only)

14Option 2: Stress (A2 only)

15Option 3: Aggression (A2 only)

16Option 3: Forensic Psychology (A2 only)

17Option 3: Addiction (A2 only)

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