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Summary AQA A Level Psychology PAPER 1 - A* ATTACHMENT ESSAY PLANS

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INCLUDES: - Essay plans (Ao1 + Ao3) for all of the memory specification points - Colour coding of researchers / key stats / marking vocabulary to aid recall / blurting / flashcards Specification-tailored essay plans for the ENTIRE Memory topic in AQA A Level and/or AS psychology How? - Past paper analysis, directly including phrases from mark schemes

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Caregiver - infant interactions
AO1 AO3

Attachment Research support - interactional synchrony
-​ A close two-way emotional bond between individuals -​ Meltzoff & Moore (1977) observed interactional synchrony on
-​ (infant and caregiver) babies from 2 weeks old - aiming to see if imitation of a
-​ Each sees each other as essential for their emotional security. caregiver was innate or learned
Both members seek closeness & feel more secure -​ E: Infants had the ability to reciprocate facial expressions
-​ Proximity: Staying physically close to the attachment through imitation / filmed gestures & the babies response
-​ Separation distress: Upset when the figure departs -​ E: Infants are born with an innate ability to imitate & coordinate
-​ Secure-base behaviour: Leaving the attachment figure / but their actions in response to others
regularly returning -​ L: Supports biological & evolutionary theories of attachment &
Feldman’s findings
Early interactions are meaningful -​
-​ Babies & caregivers have intense / meaningful interactions. Real world application
-​ Quality of these interactions = associated with the success of -​ Research into caregiver-infant interactions can be used to
attachment improve the quality of early attachments
-​ 2 main types -​ E: This has practical application, with the development of PCIT
Reciprocity - Parent Child Interaction Therapy
-​ Two-way interaction / between a baby and caregiver -​ Involves play therapy & coaching to improve attachment
-​ They take turns to respond to cues / & elicit responses quality.
from each other -​ L: Research has high external validity & importance.
-​ Like a conversation
-​ EXAMPLE: Caregiver smiles, baby smiles & laughs back. Reliability of filmed observations
Alert phases: -​ Mother-baby interactions are filmed from many angles,
-​ Feldman et al found mothers successfully respond around meaning fine details like audio and gestures can be recorded
2/3rds of the time and analysed. (Melzoff & Moore 1977)
-​ After 3 months = interaction is more intense & reciprocal -​ Inter-observer reliability can be confirmed (formula) to exceed
-​ Babies are active participants… 0.8, clips can be replayed & reanalysed via the footage.
-​ Traditional views = baby is passive -​ L: High reliability within the studies
-​ Both caregiver & baby can actively initiate interactions. -​ Replaying videos to confirm findings & cross-reference with
more observers (concurrent validity )
Interactional synchrony
-​ Simultaneous interaction Babies are unaware of observation - high internal validity
-​ EXAMPLE: Caregiver and baby copy each other’s faces -​ Mother-baby interactions are often filmed & the babies are
Feldman (2007) unaware of the observations
-​ Caregiver and baby simultaneously mirror / coordination of -​ The baby will not elicit demand characteristics
each other’s movements / communications / emotions -​ Increases the internal validity, usually demand c’s are the main
-​ Imitation → Infant directly copies the expressions issue in observational research.
-​ Sensitive responsiveness → adult correctly interprets the -​ L: Greater validity of observations - reducing impact of
meaning & responds appropriately investigator effects and high control as the baby is naive.

The importance of attachment
-​ Isabella et al (1989) Difficulty observing babies and inferring developmental
-​ Observed 30 mothers & babies importance
-​ Assessing the degree of synchrony -​ Babies are unco-ordinated meaning we just observe small
-​ Researchers assessed the quality of the attachment gestures and facial expressions.
-​ HIGH LEVELS OF SYNCHRONY associated with BETTER -​ Misinterpretation can occur (random twitch vs response?)
QUALITY MOTHER-BABY ATTACHMENT -​ Feldman (2012) argues that synchrony & reciprocity describe
behaviours which occur at the same time
-​ It DOES NOT tell us the purpose or meaning of them.
-​ L: We can't be certain from observations that they are
important in development - dependent on inference

Socially sensitive area
-​ Manipulated to argue mothers should not return to work and
just focus on interacting with their baby
-​ Negative social consequences
-​ Women may find their life choices criticised

, Schaffer’s stages of attachment
AO1 AO3

Stages of attachment High external validity of S&E’s study
-​ Most observations made by the parents of the babies were
Schaffer & Emerson (1964) during everyday/normal activities when self-reporting
PROCEDURE -​ E: Alternative = observers constantly watching in the babies’
-​ 60 babies from Glasgow / mostly working class families. homes leading to distractions or increased anxiety.
-​ Visited homes of mothers/babies every month for 1 year & -​ Mothers would feel insecure with someone watching.
again after 2 years. -​ L: More likely that ppts behaved naturally, increasing the
Separation anxiety: ecological validity (own home)
-​ Measured by asking mothers about their child’s behaviour
during everyday separations.
Stranger anxiety: Real world daycare application
-​ Measured by asking mother q’s about their child’s anxiety in -​ In the early stages (asocial/indiscriminate) babies can be
response to unfamiliar adults. comforted by any skilled adult - this finding is useful…
-​ E: If a child starts daycare later, unfamiliar adults may cause
FINDINGS distress and lead to longer-term problems
-​ Babies developed attachments through a sequence of -​ EG - stranger fears & anxiety in education due to fear of
stages (asocial/indiscriminate/specific/multiple) abandonment
-​ Specific attachment = with the person who was most -​ L: Stages can help inform parents’ decision making towards
interactive/sensitive to the babies’ signals and faces. daycare.

Poor evidence for the asocial stage
Stages of attachment (AISM) -​ In the asocial stage, babies have poor coordination and are
fairly immobile (0-6 weeks)
Asocial stage -​ E: This makes it nearly impossible for mothers to accurately
-​ 0-6 weeks report & interpret signs of anxiety and attachment.
-​ Babies display innate behaviour towards people vs inanimate -​ L: Babies may be social later in life, but due to flawed methods
objects = similar of self-reporting they may appear to be asocial.
-​ No preference for an individual caregiver
-​ Anyone can comfort them Low internal validity
-​ Babies are happier with other people. -​ Mothers may have been subject to social desirability bias or
misremembered behaviours.
Indiscriminate attachment -​ Self-report techniques are flawed
-​ 2-7 months Low temporal validity
-​ Babies display more observable social behaviour -​ Stages of attachment are based on a single large-scale study,
-​ Preference for people OVER objects. of working class baby development in 1960s Glasgow
-​ They recognise and prefer familiar people -​ Cultural variability in child-rearing practices
-​ NO SEPARATION OR STRANGER anxiety. -​ Socio-economic differences and individualist vs collectivist
-​ Attachment is indiscriminate (the same towards all) views.

Specific attachment
-​ Around 7 months (7-9m)
-​ Stranger anxiety & separation anxiety when separated from
the primary caregiver
-​ Specific attachment with the “primary attachment figure”
-​ 65% of cases = person who shows the most interaction

Multiple attachment
-​ Around 1 year
-​ Secondary attachments form with other people (siblings,
father, etc)
-​ Stranger anxiety starts to reduce
-​ 29% of babies = secondary attachments within a month of
forming a primary attachment.
-​ Age 1 = majority had multiple secondary attachments

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