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Strange situation

The strange situation is a procedure devised by Mary Ainsworth in the 1970s to observe attachment in children, that is relationships between a caregiver and child. It applies to children between the age of nine and 30 months. Broadly speaking, the attachment styles were (1) secure and (2) insecure (ambivalent and avoidance). Later, Mary Main and her husband Erik Hesse introduced the 4th category, disorganized. The procedure played an important role in the development of attachment theory.

Structured observation edit

In this procedure of the Strange Situation, the child is observed playing for 21 minutes while caregivers and strangers enter and leave the room, recreating the flow of the familiar and unfamiliar presence in most children's lives. The situation varies in stressfulness and the child's responses are observed. The child experiences the following situations:

  • Parent and infant are introduced to the experimental room.
  • Parent and infant are alone. The parent does not participate while the infant explores.
  • Stranger enters, converses with the parent, then approaches infant. Parent leaves conspicuously.
  • First separation episode: Stranger's behavior is geared to that of the infant.
  • First reunion episode: Parent greets and comforts infant, then leaves again.
  • Second separation episode: Infant is alone.
  • Continuation of second separation episode: Stranger enters and gears behavior to that of the infant.
  • Second reunion episode: Parent enters, greets infant, and picks up the infant; stranger leaves conspicuously.

Four aspects of the child's behavior are observed:

  • The amount of exploration (e.g. playing with new toys) the child engages in throughout.
  • The child's reactions to the departure of its caregiver.
  • The stranger anxiety (when the baby is alone with the stranger).
  • The child's reunion behavior with its caregiver.

On the basis of their behaviors, the children were categorized into three groups, with a fourth added later. Each of these groups reflects a different kind of attachment relationship with the caregiver.

Four patterns of attachment edit

1. Secure (B) edit

A child who is securely attached to its parent will explore and play freely while the caregiver is present, using them as a "secure base" from which to explore. The child will engage with the stranger when the caregiver is present, and may be visibly upset when the caregiver departs but happy to see the caregiver on their return. The child feels confident that the caregiver is available, and will be responsive to their attachment needs and communications.

Securely attached children are best able to explore when they have the knowledge of a secure base to return to in times of need. When assistance is given, this bolsters the sense of security and also, assuming the caregiver's assistance is helpful, educates the child in how to cope with the same problem in the future. Therefore, secure attachment can be seen as the most adaptive attachment style for learning and making use of resources in a non-threatening environment. According to attachment researchers, a child becomes securely attached when the caregiver is available and able to meet the needs of the child in a responsive and appropriate manner. Others have pointed out that there are also other determinants of the child's attachment, and that the behavior of the parent may in turn be influenced by the child's behavior.

2. Anxious-avoidant, insecure (A) edit

A child with the anxious-avoidant insecure attachment pattern will avoid or ignore the caregiver, showing little emotion when the caregiver departs or returns. The child will not explore very much regardless of who is there. Infants classified as anxious-avoidant (A) represented a puzzle in the early 1980s. They did not exhibit distress on separation, and either ignored the caregiver on their return (A1 subtype) or showed some tendency to approach together with some tendency to ignore or turn away from the caregiver (A2 subtype). Ainsworth and Bell theorised that the apparently unruffled behaviour of the avoidant infants is in fact as a mask for distress, a hypothesis later evidenced through studies of the heart rate of avoidant infants.[1][2]

Ainsworth's narrative records showed that infants avoided the caregiver in the stressful Strange Situation Procedure when they had a history of experiencing rebuff of attachment behaviour. The child's needs are frequently not met and the child comes to believe that communication of needs has no influence on the caregiver. Ainsworth's student Mary Main theorised that avoidant behaviour in the Strange Situation Procedure should be regarded as "a conditional strategy, which paradoxically permits whatever proximity is possible under conditions of maternal rejection" by de-emphasising attachment needs.[3] Main proposed that avoidance has two functions for an infant whose caregiver is consistently unresponsive to their needs. Firstly, avoidant behaviour allows the infant to maintain a conditional proximity with the caregiver: close enough to maintain protection, but distant enough to avoid rebuff. Secondly, the cognitive processes organising avoidant behaviour could help direct attention away from the unfulfilled desire for closeness with the caregiver – avoiding a situation in which the child is overwhelmed with emotion ('disorganised distress'), and therefore unable to maintain control of themselves and achieve even conditional proximity.[4]

3. Anxious-ambivalent/resistant, insecure (C) edit

Children classified as Anxious-Ambivalent/Resistant (C) showed distress even before separation, and were clingy and difficult to comfort on the caregiver's return.[5] They showed either signs of resentment in response to the absence (C1 subtype), or signs of helpless passivity (C2 subtype). Hans et al. have expressed concern that "ambivalent attachment remains the most poorly understood of Ainsworth's attachment types".[6] In particular, the relationship between ambivalent/resistant (C) and disorganisation (D) is still to be clarified.[7] However, researchers agree that the Anxious-Ambivalent/Resistant strategy is a response to unpredictably responsive caregiving, and that the displays of anger or helplessness towards the caregiver on reunion can be regarded as a conditional strategy for maintaining the availability of the caregiver by preemptively taking control of the interaction.[8][9]

4. Disorganized/disoriented (D) edit

Ainsworth herself was the first to find difficulties in fitting all infant behavior into the three classifications used in her Baltimore study. Ainsworth and colleagues sometimes observed "tense movements such as hunching the shoulders, putting the hands behind the neck and tensely cocking the head, and so on. It was our clear impression that such tension movements signified stress, both because they tended to occur chiefly in the separation episodes and because they tended to precede crying. Indeed, our hypothesis is that they occur when a child is attempting to control crying, for they tend to vanish if and when crying breaks through."[10] Such observations also appeared in the doctoral theses of Ainsworth's students. Patricia Crittenden, for example, noted that one abused infant in her doctoral sample was classed as secure (B) by her undergraduate coders because her strange situation behavior was "without either avoidance or ambivalence, she did show stress-related stereotypic headcocking throughout the strange situation. This pervasive behavior, however, was the only clue to the extent of her stress."[11]

Drawing on records of behaviors discrepant with the A, B and C classifications, a fourth classification was added by Ainsworth's graduate student Mary Main.[12] In the Strange Situation, the attachment system is expected to be activated by the departure and return of the caregiver. If the behaviour of the infant does not appear to the observer to be coordinated in a smooth way across episodes to achieve either proximity or some relative proximity with the caregiver, then it is considered "disorganised" as it indicates a disruption or flooding of the attachment system (e.g. by fear). Infant behaviours in the Strange Situation Protocol coded as disorganised/disoriented include overt displays of fear; contradictory behaviours or affects occurring simultaneously or sequentially; stereotypic, asymmetric, misdirected or jerky movements; or freezing and apparent dissociation. However, despite initial symptoms of disorganized/disoriented behaviors, Lyons-Ruth widely "recognized that 52% of disorganized infants continue to approach the caregiver, seek comfort, and cease their distress without clear ambivalent or avoidant behavior."[13]

There is "rapidly growing interest in disorganized attachment" from clinicians and policy-makers as well as researchers.[14] Yet the Disorganized/disoriented attachment (D) classification has been criticised by some for being too encompassing.[15] In 1990, Ainsworth put in print her blessing for the new "D" classification, though she urged that the addition be regarded as "open-ended, in the sense that subcategories may be distinguished", as she worried that the D classification might be too encompassing and might treat too many different forms of behaviour as if they were the same thing.[16] Indeed, the D classification puts together infants who use a somewhat disrupted secure (B) strategy with those who seem hopeless and show little attachment behaviour; it also puts together infants who run to hide when they see their caregiver in the same classification as those who show an avoidant (A) strategy on the first reunion and then an ambivalent-resistant (C) strategy on the second reunion. Perhaps responding to such concerns, George and Solomon have divided among indices of Disorganized/disoriented attachment (D) in the Strange Situation, treating some of the behaviours as a "strategy of desperation" and others as evidence that the attachment system has been flooded (e.g. by fear, or anger).[17] Crittenden also argues that some behaviour classified as Disorganized/disoriented can be regarded as more 'emergency' versions of the avoidant and/or ambivalent/resistant strategies, and function to maintain the protective availability of the caregiver to some degree. Sroufe et al. have agreed that 'even disorganised attachment behaviour (simultaneous approach-avoidance; freezing, etc.) enables a degree of proximity in the face of a frightening or unfathomable parent'.[18] However, 'the presumption that many indices of “disorganisation” are aspects of organised patterns does not preclude acceptance of the notion of disorganisation, especially in cases where the complexity and dangerousness of the threat are beyond children's capacity for response'.[19]

Main and Hesse[20] found that most of the mothers of these children had suffered major losses or other trauma shortly before or after the birth of the infant and had reacted by becoming severely depressed.[21] In fact, 56% of mothers who had lost a parent by death before they completed high school subsequently had children with disorganized attachments.[20] Subsequently studies, whilst emphasising the potential importance of unresolved loss, have qualified these findings.[22] For example, Solomon and George found that unresolved loss in the mother tended to be associated with disorganised attachment in their infant primarily when they had also experienced an unresolved trauma in their life prior to the loss.[23]

Critique of the strange situation protocol edit

Michael Rutter describes the procedure in the following terms:[24]

It is by no means free of limitations (see Lamb, Thompson, Gardener, Charnov & Estes, 1984).[25] To begin with, it is very dependent on brief separations and reunions having the same meaning for all children. This may be a major constraint when applying the procedure in cultures, such as that in Japan (see Miyake et al., 1985),[26] where infants are rarely separated from their mothers in ordinary circumstances. Also, because older children have a cognitive capacity to maintain relationships when the older person is not present, separation may not provide the same stress for them. Modified procedures based on the Strange Situation have been developed for older preschool children (see Belsky et al., 1994; Greenberg et al., 1990)[27][28] but it is much more dubious whether the same approach can be used in middle childhood. Also, despite its manifest strengths, the procedure is based on just 20 minutes of behavior. It can be scarcely expected to tap all the relevant qualities of a child's attachment relationships. Q-sort procedures based on much longer naturalistic observations in the home, and interviews with the mothers have developed in order to extend the data base (see Vaughn & Waters, 1990).[29] A further constraint is that the coding procedure results in discrete categories rather than continuously distributed dimensions. Not only is this likely to provide boundary problems, but also it is not at all obvious that discrete categories best represent the concepts that are inherent in attachment security. It seems much more likely that infants vary in their degree of security and there is need for a measurement systems that can quantify individual variation.

Other researchers as well have raised concerns about the strange situation's construct validity[30][31] and questioned its terminology as a "gold standard" measure of attachment.[31]

Ecological validity and universality edit

With respect to the ecological validity of the Strange Situation, a meta-analysis of 2,000 infant-parent dyads, including several from studies with non-Western language and/or cultural bases found the global distribution of attachment categorizations to be A (21%), B (65%), and C (14%)[32] This global distribution was generally consistent with Ainsworth et al.'s (1978) original attachment classification distributions.

However, controversy has been raised over a few cultural differences in these rates of "global" attachment classification distributions. In particular, two studies diverged from the global distributions of attachment classifications noted above. One study was conducted in North Germany [33] in which more avoidant (A) infants were found than global norms would suggest, and the other in Sapporo, Japan [34] where more resistant (C) infants were found. Of these two studies, the Japanese findings have sparked the most controversy as to the meaning of individual differences in attachment behavior as originally identified by Ainsworth et al. (1978).

In a study conducted in Sapporo, Behrens, et al., 2007.[35] found attachment distributions consistent with global norms using the six-year Main & Cassidy scoring system for attachment classification.[36] In addition to these findings supporting the global distributions of attachment classifications in Sapporo, Behrens et al. also discuss the Japanese concept of amae and its relevance to questions concerning whether the insecure-resistant (C) style of interaction may be engendered in Japanese infants as a result of the cultural practice of amae.

Attachment measurement edit

Regarding the issue of whether the breadth of infant attachment functioning can be captured by a categorical classification scheme, continuous measures of attachment security have been developed which have demonstrated adequate psychometric properties. These have been used either individually or in conjunction with discrete attachment classifications in many published reports [see Richters et al., 1998;[37] Van IJzendoorn et al., 1990).[38]] The original Richter’s et al. (1998) scale is strongly related to secure versus insecure classifications, correctly predicting about 90% of cases.[38] Readers further interested in the categorical versus continuous nature of attachment classifications (and the debate surrounding this issue) should consult the paper by Fraley and Spieker [39] and the rejoinders in the same issue by many prominent attachment researchers including J. Cassidy, A. Sroufe, E. Waters & T. Beauchaine, and M. Cummings.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ainsworth, M. D. & Bell, S. M. (1970), Attachment, exploration, and separation: Illustrated by the behavior of one-year-olds in a strange situation. Child Development, 41:49-67
  2. ^ Sroufe, A. & Waters, E. (1987) Attachment as an Organizational Construct. Child Development, 48: 1184-1199
  3. ^ Main, M. (1990) The “ultimate” causation of some infant attachment phenomena. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2: 640-643
  4. ^ Main, M. (1977a) Analysis of a peculiar form of reunion behaviour seen in some daycare children. In R. Webb (ed.) Social Development in Childhood (pp.33-78), Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
  5. ^ Cassidy, Jude, and Lisa J. Berlin. "The insecure/ambivalent pattern of attachment: Theory and research." Child development 65.4 (1994): 971-991
  6. ^ Hans, S.L., Berstein, V.J., Sims, B.E. (2000) 'Change and Continuity in Ambivalent Attachment Relationships from Infancy through Adolescence' in The Organization of Attachment Relationships, ed. Patricia M. Crittenden & Angelika H. Claussen, Cambridge: CUP, pp.279
  7. ^ Mayseless, Ofra. "Maternal caregiving strategy—a distinction between the ambivalent and the disorganized profile." Infant Mental Health Journal 19.1 (1998): 20-33
  8. ^ Solomon, J., George, C. & De Jong, A. (1995) Children classified as controlling at age six: Evidence of disorganized representational strategies and aggression at home and at school. Development and Psychopathology 7: 447–447
  9. ^ Crittenden, P.(1999) 'Danger and development: the organisation of self-protective strategies' in Atypical Attachment in Infancy and Early Childhood Among Children at Developmental Risk ed. Joan I. Vondra & Douglas Barnett, Oxford: Blackwell pp. 145–171
  10. ^ Ainsworth, M.D., Blehar, M, Waters, E, & Wall, S. (1978) Patterns of Attachment: A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation, Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, p.282
  11. ^ Crittenden, P.M. (1983) "Mother and Infant Patterns of Attachment" Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Virginia, May 1983, p.73
  12. ^ Main, Mary; Solomon, Judith (1990). "Procedures for Identifying Infants as Disorganized/Disoriented during the Ainsworth Strange Situation". In Greenberg, Mark T.; Cicchetti, Dante; Cummings, E. Mark (eds.). Attachment in the Preschool Years: Theory, Research, and Intervention. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 121–60. ISBN 978-0-226-30630-8.
  13. ^ Karlen Lyons-Ruth, Jean-Francois Bureau, M. Ann Easterbrooks, Ingrid Obsuth, Kate Hennighausen & Lauriane Vulliez-Coady (2013) Parsing the construct of maternal insensitivity: distinct longitudinal pathways associated with early maternal withdrawal, Attachment & Human Development, 15:5-6, 562-582
  14. ^ Kochanska, Grazyna, and Sanghag Kim. "Early Attachment Organization With Both Parents and Future Behavior Problems: From Infancy to Middle Childhood." Child Development 84.1 (2013): 283-296
  15. ^ Svanberg, P.O. (2009). Promoting a secure attachment through early assessment and interventions. In J. Barlow & P.O. Svanberg (Eds.) Keeping the Baby in Mind, (pp. 100-114), London: Routledge.
  16. ^ Ainsworth, M. (1990). "Epilogue" in Attachment in the Preschool Years, ed. M.T. Greenberg, D. Ciccheti & E.M. Cummings. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press, pp.463-488
  17. ^ Solomon, J. & George, C. (1999a) The place of disorganisation in attachment theory. In Judith Solomon & Carol George (Eds) Attachment Disorganisation (pp3-32), p.27, NY: Guilford
  18. ^ Sroufe, A. Egeland, B., Carlson, E. & Collins, W.A. (2005) The Development of the person: the Minnesota study of risk and adaptation from birth to adulthood, NY: Guilford Press, p.245
  19. ^ Crittenden, P. (1999) "Danger and development: the organisation of self-protective strategies" in Atypical Attachment in Infancy and Early Childhood Among Children at Developmental Risk ed. Joan I. Vondra & Douglas Barnett, Oxford: Blackwell pp. 159-160
  20. ^ a b Main, Mary; Hesse, Erik (1993). "Parents' Unresolved Traumatic Experiences Are Related to Infant Disorganized Attachment Status: Is Frightened and/or Frightening Parental Behavior the Linking Mechanism?". In Greenberg, Mark T.; Cicchetti, Dante; Cummings, E. Mark (eds.). Attachment in the Preschool Years: Theory, Research, and Intervention. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 161–84. ISBN 978-0-226-30630-8.
  21. ^ Colin Murray Parkes (2006). Love and Loss. Routledge, London and New York. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-415-39041-5.
  22. ^ Madigan, Sheri, et al. "Unresolved states of mind, anomalous parental behavior, and disorganized attachment: A review and meta-analysis of a transmission gap." Attachment & human development 8.2 (2006): 89-111
  23. ^ Solomon, J., & George, C. (2006). Intergenerational transmission of dysregulated maternal caregiving: Mothers describe their upbringing and child rearing. In O. Mayseless (Ed). Parenting representations: Theory, research, and clinical implications (pp. 265-295) Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  24. ^ Rutter, M (1995). "Clinical implications of attachment concepts: Retrospect and prospect". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, and Allied Disciplines. 36 (4): 549–71. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7610.1995.tb02314.x. PMID 7650083.
  25. ^ Grossmann, Klaus E.; Grossmann, Karin (2010). "Discovery and proof in attachment research". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 7: 154–155. doi:10.1017/S0140525X00026601. S2CID 143816481.
  26. ^ Miyake, Kazuo; Chen, Shing-Jen; Campos, Joseph J. (1985). "Infant Temperament, Mother's Mode of Interaction, and Attachment in Japan: An Interim Report". Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development. 50 (1–2): 276–97. doi:10.2307/3333838. JSTOR 3333838. PMID 4069131.
  27. ^ Belsky, J. & Cassidy, J. (1994). Attachment Theory and Evidence. In M. Rutter & D. Hay (Eds) Development Through Life; A Handbook For Clinicians (pp. 373-402). Oxford; Blackwell Scientific Publications. ISBN 0632036931
  28. ^ Greenberg, Mark T.; Cicchetti, Dante; Cummings, E. Mark, eds. (1993-05-15). Attachment in the Preschool Years: Theory, Research, and Intervention. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-30630-8.[page needed]
  29. ^ Vaughn, BE; Waters, E (1990). "Attachment behavior at home and in the laboratory: Q-sort observations and strange situation classifications of one-year-olds". Child Development. 61 (6): 1965–73. doi:10.2307/1130850. JSTOR 1130850. PMID 2083508.
  30. ^ Clarke-Stewart, K. A., Allhusen, V. D., & Goossens, F. (2001). Daycare and the Strange Situation. Guilford.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ a b Ziv, Yair; Hotam, Yotam (2015-06-01). "Theory and measure in the psychological field: The case of attachment theory and the strange situation procedure". Theory & Psychology. 25 (3): 274–291. doi:10.1177/0959354315577970. ISSN 0959-3543. S2CID 146749917.
  32. ^ van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.; Kroonenberg, Pieter M. (1988). "Cross-Cultural Patterns of Attachment: A Meta-Analysis of the Strange Situation" (PDF). Child Development. 59 (1): 147–56. doi:10.2307/1130396. hdl:1887/11634. JSTOR 1130396.
  33. ^ Grossmann, Klaus E.; Grossmann, Karin; Huber, Franz; Wartner, Ulrike (1981). "German Children's Behavior Towards Their Mothers at 12 Months and Their Fathers at 18 Months in Ainsworth's Strange Situation". International Journal of Behavioral Development. 4 (2): 157–81. doi:10.1177/016502548100400202. S2CID 145760368.
  34. ^ Takahashi, Keiko (1986). "Examining the strange-situation procedure with Japanese mothers and 12-month-old infants". Developmental Psychology. 22 (2): 265–70. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.22.2.265.
  35. ^ Behrens, Kazuko Y.; Hesse, Erik; Main, Mary (2007). "Mothers' attachment status as determined by the Adult Attachment Interview predicts their 6-year-olds' reunion responses: A study conducted in Japan". Developmental Psychology. 43 (6): 1553–67. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.43.6.1553. PMID 18020832.
  36. ^ Main, Mary; Cassidy, Jude (1988). "Categories of response to reunion with the parent at age 6: Predictable from infant attachment classifications and stable over a 1-month period". Developmental Psychology. 24 (3): 415–26. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.24.3.415.
  37. ^ Richters, JE; Waters, E; Vaughn, BE (1988). "Empirical classification of infant-mother relationships from interactive behavior and crying during reunion". Child Development. 59 (2): 512–22. doi:10.2307/1130329. JSTOR 1130329. PMID 3359869.
  38. ^ a b Van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H.; Kroonenberg, Pieter M. (1990). "Cross-cultural consistency of coding the strange situation". Infant Behavior and Development. 13 (4): 469–85. doi:10.1016/0163-6383(90)90017-3. hdl:1887/11624.
  39. ^ Fraley, R. Chris; Spieker, Susan J. (2003). "Are infant attachment patterns continuously or categorically distributed? A taxometric analysis of strange situation behavior". Developmental Psychology. 39 (3): 387–404. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.39.3.387. PMID 12760508.

strange, situation, strange, situation, procedure, devised, mary, ainsworth, 1970s, observe, attachment, children, that, relationships, between, caregiver, child, applies, children, between, nine, months, broadly, speaking, attachment, styles, were, secure, in. The strange situation is a procedure devised by Mary Ainsworth in the 1970s to observe attachment in children that is relationships between a caregiver and child It applies to children between the age of nine and 30 months Broadly speaking the attachment styles were 1 secure and 2 insecure ambivalent and avoidance Later Mary Main and her husband Erik Hesse introduced the 4th category disorganized The procedure played an important role in the development of attachment theory Contents 1 Structured observation 2 Four patterns of attachment 2 1 1 Secure B 2 2 2 Anxious avoidant insecure A 2 3 3 Anxious ambivalent resistant insecure C 2 4 4 Disorganized disoriented D 3 Critique of the strange situation protocol 3 1 Ecological validity and universality 3 2 Attachment measurement 4 See also 5 ReferencesStructured observation editIn this procedure of the Strange Situation the child is observed playing for 21 minutes while caregivers and strangers enter and leave the room recreating the flow of the familiar and unfamiliar presence in most children s lives The situation varies in stressfulness and the child s responses are observed The child experiences the following situations Parent and infant are introduced to the experimental room Parent and infant are alone The parent does not participate while the infant explores Stranger enters converses with the parent then approaches infant Parent leaves conspicuously First separation episode Stranger s behavior is geared to that of the infant First reunion episode Parent greets and comforts infant then leaves again Second separation episode Infant is alone Continuation of second separation episode Stranger enters and gears behavior to that of the infant Second reunion episode Parent enters greets infant and picks up the infant stranger leaves conspicuously Four aspects of the child s behavior are observed The amount of exploration e g playing with new toys the child engages in throughout The child s reactions to the departure of its caregiver The stranger anxiety when the baby is alone with the stranger The child s reunion behavior with its caregiver On the basis of their behaviors the children were categorized into three groups with a fourth added later Each of these groups reflects a different kind of attachment relationship with the caregiver Four patterns of attachment edit1 Secure B edit A child who is securely attached to its parent will explore and play freely while the caregiver is present using them as a secure base from which to explore The child will engage with the stranger when the caregiver is present and may be visibly upset when the caregiver departs but happy to see the caregiver on their return The child feels confident that the caregiver is available and will be responsive to their attachment needs and communications Securely attached children are best able to explore when they have the knowledge of a secure base to return to in times of need When assistance is given this bolsters the sense of security and also assuming the caregiver s assistance is helpful educates the child in how to cope with the same problem in the future Therefore secure attachment can be seen as the most adaptive attachment style for learning and making use of resources in a non threatening environment According to attachment researchers a child becomes securely attached when the caregiver is available and able to meet the needs of the child in a responsive and appropriate manner Others have pointed out that there are also other determinants of the child s attachment and that the behavior of the parent may in turn be influenced by the child s behavior 2 Anxious avoidant insecure A edit A child with the anxious avoidant insecure attachment pattern will avoid or ignore the caregiver showing little emotion when the caregiver departs or returns The child will not explore very much regardless of who is there Infants classified as anxious avoidant A represented a puzzle in the early 1980s They did not exhibit distress on separation and either ignored the caregiver on their return A1 subtype or showed some tendency to approach together with some tendency to ignore or turn away from the caregiver A2 subtype Ainsworth and Bell theorised that the apparently unruffled behaviour of the avoidant infants is in fact as a mask for distress a hypothesis later evidenced through studies of the heart rate of avoidant infants 1 2 Ainsworth s narrative records showed that infants avoided the caregiver in the stressful Strange Situation Procedure when they had a history of experiencing rebuff of attachment behaviour The child s needs are frequently not met and the child comes to believe that communication of needs has no influence on the caregiver Ainsworth s student Mary Main theorised that avoidant behaviour in the Strange Situation Procedure should be regarded as a conditional strategy which paradoxically permits whatever proximity is possible under conditions of maternal rejection by de emphasising attachment needs 3 Main proposed that avoidance has two functions for an infant whose caregiver is consistently unresponsive to their needs Firstly avoidant behaviour allows the infant to maintain a conditional proximity with the caregiver close enough to maintain protection but distant enough to avoid rebuff Secondly the cognitive processes organising avoidant behaviour could help direct attention away from the unfulfilled desire for closeness with the caregiver avoiding a situation in which the child is overwhelmed with emotion disorganised distress and therefore unable to maintain control of themselves and achieve even conditional proximity 4 3 Anxious ambivalent resistant insecure C edit Children classified as Anxious Ambivalent Resistant C showed distress even before separation and were clingy and difficult to comfort on the caregiver s return 5 They showed either signs of resentment in response to the absence C1 subtype or signs of helpless passivity C2 subtype Hans et al have expressed concern that ambivalent attachment remains the most poorly understood of Ainsworth s attachment types 6 In particular the relationship between ambivalent resistant C and disorganisation D is still to be clarified 7 However researchers agree that the Anxious Ambivalent Resistant strategy is a response to unpredictably responsive caregiving and that the displays of anger or helplessness towards the caregiver on reunion can be regarded as a conditional strategy for maintaining the availability of the caregiver by preemptively taking control of the interaction 8 9 4 Disorganized disoriented D edit Ainsworth herself was the first to find difficulties in fitting all infant behavior into the three classifications used in her Baltimore study Ainsworth and colleagues sometimes observed tense movements such as hunching the shoulders putting the hands behind the neck and tensely cocking the head and so on It was our clear impression that such tension movements signified stress both because they tended to occur chiefly in the separation episodes and because they tended to precede crying Indeed our hypothesis is that they occur when a child is attempting to control crying for they tend to vanish if and when crying breaks through 10 Such observations also appeared in the doctoral theses of Ainsworth s students Patricia Crittenden for example noted that one abused infant in her doctoral sample was classed as secure B by her undergraduate coders because her strange situation behavior was without either avoidance or ambivalence she did show stress related stereotypic headcocking throughout the strange situation This pervasive behavior however was the only clue to the extent of her stress 11 Drawing on records of behaviors discrepant with the A B and C classifications a fourth classification was added by Ainsworth s graduate student Mary Main 12 In the Strange Situation the attachment system is expected to be activated by the departure and return of the caregiver If the behaviour of the infant does not appear to the observer to be coordinated in a smooth way across episodes to achieve either proximity or some relative proximity with the caregiver then it is considered disorganised as it indicates a disruption or flooding of the attachment system e g by fear Infant behaviours in the Strange Situation Protocol coded as disorganised disoriented include overt displays of fear contradictory behaviours or affects occurring simultaneously or sequentially stereotypic asymmetric misdirected or jerky movements or freezing and apparent dissociation However despite initial symptoms of disorganized disoriented behaviors Lyons Ruth widely recognized that 52 of disorganized infants continue to approach the caregiver seek comfort and cease their distress without clear ambivalent or avoidant behavior 13 There is rapidly growing interest in disorganized attachment from clinicians and policy makers as well as researchers 14 Yet the Disorganized disoriented attachment D classification has been criticised by some for being too encompassing 15 In 1990 Ainsworth put in print her blessing for the new D classification though she urged that the addition be regarded as open ended in the sense that subcategories may be distinguished as she worried that the D classification might be too encompassing and might treat too many different forms of behaviour as if they were the same thing 16 Indeed the D classification puts together infants who use a somewhat disrupted secure B strategy with those who seem hopeless and show little attachment behaviour it also puts together infants who run to hide when they see their caregiver in the same classification as those who show an avoidant A strategy on the first reunion and then an ambivalent resistant C strategy on the second reunion Perhaps responding to such concerns George and Solomon have divided among indices of Disorganized disoriented attachment D in the Strange Situation treating some of the behaviours as a strategy of desperation and others as evidence that the attachment system has been flooded e g by fear or anger 17 Crittenden also argues that some behaviour classified as Disorganized disoriented can be regarded as more emergency versions of the avoidant and or ambivalent resistant strategies and function to maintain the protective availability of the caregiver to some degree Sroufe et al have agreed that even disorganised attachment behaviour simultaneous approach avoidance freezing etc enables a degree of proximity in the face of a frightening or unfathomable parent 18 However the presumption that many indices of disorganisation are aspects of organised patterns does not preclude acceptance of the notion of disorganisation especially in cases where the complexity and dangerousness of the threat are beyond children s capacity for response 19 Main and Hesse 20 found that most of the mothers of these children had suffered major losses or other trauma shortly before or after the birth of the infant and had reacted by becoming severely depressed 21 In fact 56 of mothers who had lost a parent by death before they completed high school subsequently had children with disorganized attachments 20 Subsequently studies whilst emphasising the potential importance of unresolved loss have qualified these findings 22 For example Solomon and George found that unresolved loss in the mother tended to be associated with disorganised attachment in their infant primarily when they had also experienced an unresolved trauma in their life prior to the loss 23 Critique of the strange situation protocol editMichael Rutter describes the procedure in the following terms 24 It is by no means free of limitations see Lamb Thompson Gardener Charnov amp Estes 1984 25 To begin with it is very dependent on brief separations and reunions having the same meaning for all children This may be a major constraint when applying the procedure in cultures such as that in Japan see Miyake et al 1985 26 where infants are rarely separated from their mothers in ordinary circumstances Also because older children have a cognitive capacity to maintain relationships when the older person is not present separation may not provide the same stress for them Modified procedures based on the Strange Situation have been developed for older preschool children see Belsky et al 1994 Greenberg et al 1990 27 28 but it is much more dubious whether the same approach can be used in middle childhood Also despite its manifest strengths the procedure is based on just 20 minutes of behavior It can be scarcely expected to tap all the relevant qualities of a child s attachment relationships Q sort procedures based on much longer naturalistic observations in the home and interviews with the mothers have developed in order to extend the data base see Vaughn amp Waters 1990 29 A further constraint is that the coding procedure results in discrete categories rather than continuously distributed dimensions Not only is this likely to provide boundary problems but also it is not at all obvious that discrete categories best represent the concepts that are inherent in attachment security It seems much more likely that infants vary in their degree of security and there is need for a measurement systems that can quantify individual variation Other researchers as well have raised concerns about the strange situation s construct validity 30 31 and questioned its terminology as a gold standard measure of attachment 31 Ecological validity and universality edit With respect to the ecological validity of the Strange Situation a meta analysis of 2 000 infant parent dyads including several from studies with non Western language and or cultural bases found the global distribution of attachment categorizations to be A 21 B 65 and C 14 32 This global distribution was generally consistent with Ainsworth et al s 1978 original attachment classification distributions However controversy has been raised over a few cultural differences in these rates of global attachment classification distributions In particular two studies diverged from the global distributions of attachment classifications noted above One study was conducted in North Germany 33 in which more avoidant A infants were found than global norms would suggest and the other in Sapporo Japan 34 where more resistant C infants were found Of these two studies the Japanese findings have sparked the most controversy as to the meaning of individual differences in attachment behavior as originally identified by Ainsworth et al 1978 In a study conducted in Sapporo Behrens et al 2007 35 found attachment distributions consistent with global norms using the six year Main amp Cassidy scoring system for attachment classification 36 In addition to these findings supporting the global distributions of attachment classifications in Sapporo Behrens et al also discuss the Japanese concept of amae and its relevance to questions concerning whether the insecure resistant C style of interaction may be engendered in Japanese infants as a result of the cultural practice of amae Attachment measurement edit Regarding the issue of whether the breadth of infant attachment functioning can be captured by a categorical classification scheme continuous measures of attachment security have been developed which have demonstrated adequate psychometric properties These have been used either individually or in conjunction with discrete attachment classifications in many published reports see Richters et al 1998 37 Van IJzendoorn et al 1990 38 The original Richter s et al 1998 scale is strongly related to secure versus insecure classifications correctly predicting about 90 of cases 38 Readers further interested in the categorical versus continuous nature of attachment classifications and the debate surrounding this issue should consult the paper by Fraley and Spieker 39 and the rejoinders in the same issue by many prominent attachment researchers including J Cassidy A Sroufe E Waters amp T Beauchaine and M Cummings See also editAttachment in children Reactive attachment disorder Visual cliff Attachment measuresReferences edit Ainsworth M D amp Bell S M 1970 Attachment exploration and separation Illustrated by the behavior of one year olds in a strange situation Child Development 41 49 67 Sroufe A amp Waters E 1987 Attachment as an Organizational Construct Child Development 48 1184 1199 Main M 1990 The ultimate causation of some infant attachment phenomena Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 640 643 Main M 1977a Analysis of a peculiar form of reunion behaviour seen in some daycare children In R Webb ed Social Development in Childhood pp 33 78 Baltimore Johns Hopkins Cassidy Jude and Lisa J Berlin The insecure ambivalent pattern of attachment Theory and research Child development 65 4 1994 971 991 Hans S L Berstein V J Sims B E 2000 Change and Continuity in Ambivalent Attachment Relationships from Infancy through Adolescence in The Organization of Attachment Relationships ed Patricia M Crittenden amp Angelika H Claussen Cambridge CUP pp 279 Mayseless Ofra Maternal caregiving strategy a distinction between the ambivalent and the disorganized profile Infant Mental Health Journal 19 1 1998 20 33 Solomon J George C amp De Jong A 1995 Children classified as controlling at age six Evidence of disorganized representational strategies and aggression at home and at school Development and Psychopathology 7 447 447 Crittenden P 1999 Danger and development the organisation of self protective strategies in Atypical Attachment in Infancy and Early Childhood Among Children at Developmental Risk ed Joan I Vondra amp Douglas Barnett Oxford Blackwell pp 145 171 Ainsworth M D Blehar M Waters E amp Wall S 1978 Patterns of Attachment A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation Hillsdale NJ Lawrence Erlbaum p 282 Crittenden P M 1983 Mother and Infant Patterns of Attachment Unpublished PhD Dissertation University of Virginia May 1983 p 73 Main Mary Solomon Judith 1990 Procedures for Identifying Infants as Disorganized Disoriented during the Ainsworth Strange Situation In Greenberg Mark T Cicchetti Dante Cummings E Mark eds Attachment in the Preschool Years Theory Research and Intervention Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 121 60 ISBN 978 0 226 30630 8 Karlen Lyons Ruth Jean Francois Bureau M Ann Easterbrooks Ingrid Obsuth Kate Hennighausen amp Lauriane Vulliez Coady 2013 Parsing the construct of maternal insensitivity distinct longitudinal pathways associated with early maternal withdrawal Attachment amp Human Development 15 5 6 562 582 Kochanska Grazyna and Sanghag Kim Early Attachment Organization With Both Parents and Future Behavior Problems From Infancy to Middle Childhood Child Development 84 1 2013 283 296 Svanberg P O 2009 Promoting a secure attachment through early assessment and interventions In J Barlow amp P O Svanberg Eds Keeping the Baby in Mind pp 100 114 London Routledge Ainsworth M 1990 Epilogue in Attachment in the Preschool Years ed M T Greenberg D Ciccheti amp E M Cummings Chicago IL Chicago University Press pp 463 488 Solomon J amp George C 1999a The place of disorganisation in attachment theory In Judith Solomon amp Carol George Eds Attachment Disorganisation pp3 32 p 27 NY Guilford Sroufe A Egeland B Carlson E amp Collins W A 2005 The Development of the person the Minnesota study of risk and adaptation from birth to adulthood NY Guilford Press p 245 Crittenden P 1999 Danger and development the organisation of self protective strategies in Atypical Attachment in Infancy and Early Childhood Among Children at Developmental Risk ed Joan I Vondra amp Douglas Barnett Oxford Blackwell pp 159 160 a b Main Mary Hesse Erik 1993 Parents Unresolved Traumatic Experiences Are Related to Infant Disorganized Attachment Status Is Frightened and or Frightening Parental Behavior the Linking Mechanism In Greenberg Mark T Cicchetti Dante Cummings E Mark eds Attachment in the Preschool Years Theory Research and Intervention Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 161 84 ISBN 978 0 226 30630 8 Colin Murray Parkes 2006 Love and Loss Routledge London and New York p 13 ISBN 978 0 415 39041 5 Madigan Sheri et al Unresolved states of mind anomalous parental behavior and disorganized attachment A review and meta analysis of a transmission gap Attachment amp human development 8 2 2006 89 111 Solomon J amp George C 2006 Intergenerational transmission of dysregulated maternal caregiving Mothers describe their upbringing and child rearing In O Mayseless Ed Parenting representations Theory research and clinical implications pp 265 295 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Rutter M 1995 Clinical implications of attachment concepts Retrospect and prospect Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines 36 4 549 71 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7610 1995 tb02314 x PMID 7650083 Grossmann Klaus E Grossmann Karin 2010 Discovery and proof in attachment research Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7 154 155 doi 10 1017 S0140525X00026601 S2CID 143816481 Miyake Kazuo Chen Shing Jen Campos Joseph J 1985 Infant Temperament Mother s Mode of Interaction and Attachment in Japan An Interim Report Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 50 1 2 276 97 doi 10 2307 3333838 JSTOR 3333838 PMID 4069131 Belsky J amp Cassidy J 1994 Attachment Theory and Evidence In M Rutter amp D Hay Eds Development Through Life A Handbook For Clinicians pp 373 402 Oxford Blackwell Scientific Publications ISBN 0632036931 Greenberg Mark T Cicchetti Dante Cummings E Mark eds 1993 05 15 Attachment in the Preschool Years Theory Research and Intervention Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 30630 8 page needed Vaughn BE Waters E 1990 Attachment behavior at home and in the laboratory Q sort observations and strange situation classifications of one year olds Child Development 61 6 1965 73 doi 10 2307 1130850 JSTOR 1130850 PMID 2083508 Clarke Stewart K A Allhusen V D amp Goossens F 2001 Daycare and the Strange Situation Guilford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Ziv Yair Hotam Yotam 2015 06 01 Theory and measure in the psychological field The case of attachment theory and the strange situation procedure Theory amp Psychology 25 3 274 291 doi 10 1177 0959354315577970 ISSN 0959 3543 S2CID 146749917 van IJzendoorn Marinus H Kroonenberg Pieter M 1988 Cross Cultural Patterns of Attachment A Meta Analysis of the Strange Situation PDF Child Development 59 1 147 56 doi 10 2307 1130396 hdl 1887 11634 JSTOR 1130396 Grossmann Klaus E Grossmann Karin Huber Franz Wartner Ulrike 1981 German Children s Behavior Towards Their Mothers at 12 Months and Their Fathers at 18 Months in Ainsworth s Strange Situation International Journal of Behavioral Development 4 2 157 81 doi 10 1177 016502548100400202 S2CID 145760368 Takahashi Keiko 1986 Examining the strange situation procedure with Japanese mothers and 12 month old infants Developmental Psychology 22 2 265 70 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 22 2 265 Behrens Kazuko Y Hesse Erik Main Mary 2007 Mothers attachment status as determined by the Adult Attachment Interview predicts their 6 year olds reunion responses A study conducted in Japan Developmental Psychology 43 6 1553 67 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 43 6 1553 PMID 18020832 Main Mary Cassidy Jude 1988 Categories of response to reunion with the parent at age 6 Predictable from infant attachment classifications and stable over a 1 month period Developmental Psychology 24 3 415 26 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 24 3 415 Richters JE Waters E Vaughn BE 1988 Empirical classification of infant mother relationships from interactive behavior and crying during reunion Child Development 59 2 512 22 doi 10 2307 1130329 JSTOR 1130329 PMID 3359869 a b Van Ijzendoorn Marinus H Kroonenberg Pieter M 1990 Cross cultural consistency of coding the strange situation Infant Behavior and Development 13 4 469 85 doi 10 1016 0163 6383 90 90017 3 hdl 1887 11624 Fraley R Chris Spieker Susan J 2003 Are infant attachment patterns continuously or categorically distributed A taxometric analysis of strange situation behavior Developmental Psychology 39 3 387 404 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 39 3 387 PMID 12760508 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strange situation amp oldid 1209012446, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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