Question 1
1. Critically discuss how early social relationships influence social and emotional development.
In your answer, refer to relevant developmental theories and empirical research, including the
evolutionary psychology perspective. In your discussion, analyse how different forms of
attachment influence psychosocial development with reference to Erik Erikson’s psychosocial
development theory.
Introduction
The proposition that early social relationships fundamentally shape social and emotional
development represents one of the most significant insights in developmental psychology. This
discussion critically examines how early relational experiences—particularly attachment
relationships—serve as foundational templates for subsequent psychosocial functioning. Drawing
upon attachment theory, Erikson's psychosocial framework, evolutionary psychology perspectives,
and empirical research, I argue that while early social relationships are undeniably influential, their
impact is neither deterministic nor universal; rather, it operates through complex, bidirectional
processes that are moderated by cultural context, individual temperament, and later relational
experiences.
Theoretical Foundations: Attachment Theory and Its Evolution
John Bowlby's attachment theory, as elaborated by Mary Ainsworth, provides the cornerstone for
understanding early social relationships. Bowlby (1969) proposed that infants possess an innate
biological predisposition to form attachments to caregivers—a behavior he explained through
evolutionary psychology. From this perspective, attachment behaviors evolved because they
enhanced infant survival in environments where proximity to protective adults reduced predation and
other threats (Bowlby, 1969/1982). This evolutionary grounding distinguishes attachment theory
from purely learning-based accounts, suggesting that attachment is not merely a byproduct of
feeding associations (as behaviorists proposed) but an organized behavioral system with distinct
survival functions.
Ainsworth's Strange Situation procedure, developed to classify attachment patterns, identified three
primary attachment styles: secure, anxious-avoidant, and anxious-resistant (later expanded to include
disorganized attachment) (Ainsworth et al., 1978). Securely attached infants use their caregiver as a
secure base from which to explore, demonstrating distress upon separation and seeking comfort upon
reunion. Avoidant infants appear indifferent to caregiver presence or absence, while resistant infants
show ambivalence—seeking proximity while resisting comfort. These classifications, while
influential, have faced critical scrutiny regarding their cultural validity and stability over time.
The evolutionary psychology perspective extends Bowlby's framework by examining how
attachment patterns may represent conditional strategies calibrated to environmental conditions.
Belsky, Steinberg, and Draper (1991) proposed that early attachment experiences serve as a
"barometer" of environmental quality, influencing subsequent reproductive strategies. According to
this evolutionary-developmental model, insecure attachment in harsh, unpredictable environments
may promote earlier sexual maturation and more opportunistic mating strategies, whereas secure
attachment in supportive environments fosters slower development and greater parental investment.
This perspective has generated considerable controversy, with critics arguing that it risks biological
determinism and underestimates human behavioral plasticity (Ellis et al., 2012).