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Social Development in Infancy and Childhood

Social Development in Infancy and Childhood. Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development. Stranger Anxiety. The fear of strangers an infant displays around 8 months of age. Social Development in Infancy and Childhood: Attachment. Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development. Attachment.

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Social Development in Infancy and Childhood

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  1. Social Development in Infancy and Childhood Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development

  2. Stranger Anxiety • The fear of strangers an infant displays around 8 months of age

  3. Social Development in Infancy and Childhood: Attachment Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development

  4. Attachment • An emotional tie with another person resulting in seeking closeness • Children develop strong attachments to their parents and caregivers. • Body contact, familiarity, and responsiveness all contribute to attachment.

  5. Harry Harlow • Did research with infant monkeys on how body contact relates to attachment • The monkeys had to chose between a cloth mother or a wire mother that provided food.

  6. Harry Harlow • The monkeys spent most of their time by the cloth mother.

  7. Harry Harlow

  8. Origins of Attachment Harlow (1971) showed that infants bond with surrogate mothers because of bodily contact and not because of nourishment. Harlow Primate Laboratory, University of Wisconsin

  9. Origins of Attachment Like bodily contact, familiarity is another factor that causes attachment. In some animals (goslings), imprinting is the cause of attachment. Alastair Miller

  10. Attachment Differences: Why? Why do these attachment differences exist?

  11. Insecure Attachment Harlow’s studies showed that monkeys experience great anxiety if their terry-cloth mother is removed. Harlow Primate Laboratory, University of Wisconsin

  12. Harlow’s Study

  13. Familiarity • Sense of contentment with that which is already known • Infants are familiar with their parents and caregivers.

  14. Imprinting and Critical Period • A process by which certain animals, early in life, form attachments • The imprinted behavior develops within a critical period--an optimal period when the organism’s exposure to certain stimuli produce the imprinted behavior. • Konrad Lorenz studied imprinting.

  15. Konrad Lorenz • Studied imprinted behaviors • Goslings are imprinted to follow the first large moving object they see.

  16. Konrad Lorenz and Imprinting

  17. Social Development in Infancy and Childhood: Parenting Patterns Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development

  18. Responsiveness • Responsive parents are aware of what their children are doing. • Unresponsive parents ignore their children--helping only when they want to.

  19. Securely or Insecurely Attached • Securely attached – children will explore their environment when primary caregiver is present • Insecurely attached – children will appear distressed and cry when caregiver leaves. Will cling to them when they return

  20. Attachment

  21. Effects of Attachment • Secure attachment predicts social competence. • Deprivation of attachment is linked to negative outcome. • A responsive environment helps most infants recover from attachment disruption.

  22. The End

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