# 08 - This classification below correlates highly w

# This classification below correlates highly with 1. Responsiveness and sensitivity of the mothers to the needs of their children and 2. Total amount and quality of stimulation (holding) provided by the mothers.

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from their mothers during their first weeks of life. Harlow substituted a surrogate mother made 
from wire or cloth for the real mother. The infants preferred the cloth-covered surrogate mother, 
which provided contact comfort, to the wire covered surrogate, which provided no contact 
comfort. This preference was observed irrespective of feeding, i.e. the terry-cloth soft-surrogate 
mother was preferred even if it did not have a feeding nipple attached to it. 
Ainsworth’s experiments: 
Ainsworth constructed a 
strange 
situation 
experiment 
with 
separation and 2 reunion 
episodes. 
An 
infant 
is 
observed in the presence 
and absence of its mother 
and a stranger in the 
vicinity in seven different combinations. According to the infant’s behaviour it is classified as 
type A, B or C. 
This classification below correlates highly with 1. Responsiveness and sensitivity of the mothers 
to the needs of their children and 2. Total amount and quality of stimulation (holding) provided 
by the mothers. 
 Type A: Anxious avoidant: 15%. Indifferent attitude to the mother is leaving the room or 
entering the room; keeps playing indifferent to mother’s presence. Distress when alone, 
not when the mother is leaving. Stranger can comfort the child easily. Highly environment 
directed, low attachment behaviour. Greater in the West. Perpetrators of bullying mostly 
have this pattern. 
 Type B: Secure: 70%. Plays independently when the mother is in the vicinity (secure base 
effect). Distress when the mother is leaving; seeks contact on the return of the mother and 
gets quickly comforted by the mother, not a stranger. 
 Type C: Anxious resistant: 15%. Fussy and cries a lot and cannot use the mother as a 
secure base to explore around. Very high levels of distress are seen when the mother is 
leaving. But not comforted easily even on her return; appears ambivalent about her return. 
Active resistance to stranger’s efforts to pacify. Highly caregiver directed low play 
behaviour. Greater in Japanese and Israeli families. Furthermore, this pattern is also 
common among victims of bullying. 
Strange Situation Experiment 
Situation 1 
Both mother and infant enter the room 
Situation 2 
A stranger joins them 
Situation 3 
Mother leaves now; infant left with stranger 
Situation 4 
Mother returns; stranger leaves 
Situation 5 
Infant left alone; mother leaves now 
Situation 6 
Stranger comes back and tries to comfort the child 
Situation 7 
Mother comes back and comforts, stranger leaves.

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 In some cases a fourth type D - disorganised type - is also seen. This is seen in maltreated 
or maternally deprived children. The child has an insecure, dazed look and acts as if it is 
frightened of the mother. This pattern may be a precursor to later personality difficulties 
or dissociative experiences. Mother may have an experience of being abused as a child. 
Attachment style may differ with different caregivers; it is a function of the quality of caregiving 
and NOT the temperament of a child. 
Main devised a semi-structured adult attachment interview with 15 items (AAI). This is based on 
the fact that infantile attachment pattern can be predicted reasonably accurately using discourse 
analysis of adults when recollecting their childhood. Accordingly 4 patterns are noted. 
 Secure autonomous: Those who had secure attachment provide spontaneous and 
coherent answers with the ability to talk freely about negative experiences in childhood 
type B Ainsworth. 
 Dismissing of experiences: Those who had an avoidant (insecure) pattern often minimise 
their experiences, do not elaborate on them and do not use colourful metaphors during the 
discourse– type A (avoidant) 
 Entangled: Those who had insecure but ambivalent (enmeshed) attachment use multiple 
emotionally laden responses and ramble excessively, – type C resistant. 
 Unresolved disorganised: Broken continuity and interrupted the logical flow of thoughts 
is seen in those who had insecure disorganised attachment pattern– type D. 
 
The secure attachment appears to be a protective factor for the development of childhood 
disorders, and insecure attachment is best conceptualized as a risk factor for a number of 
childhood disorders. It has been demonstrated in various studies that insecure attachment during 
early childhood is associated with the development of behavioural problems especially 
oppositional defiant disorder at school age. Insecure attachment in combination with other 
vulnerability factors such as family dysfunction, difficult child temperament, and poor parental 
management can give rise to later childhood disorders 
Spitz – anaclitic depression or hospitalism: When children are hospitalised for physical 
problems, a short period of separation from primary caregiver ensues; this loss of loved one is 
called anaclitic (object loss) depression. It is counterproductive to child’s development. But 
recovery is good if the maternal deprivation is kept minimum i.e. less than 3 months. Rare if 
prolonged. Surrogate mothering helps the infant when having the anaclitic depression to some 
extent.

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Margaret Mahler described the 
development 
of 
a 
sense 
of 
identity 
in 
young 
children, 
independent of their mothers. 
This 
is 
called 
separationindividuation theory, and the 
proposed stages are supposed to 
be universal in all children. 
Rutter distinguished deprivation 
from privation. 
 Deprivation: Attachment 
is formed but lost temporarily. If 
it is for a short time then protest 
– despair – detachment phases 
(similar to grief) are seen. This is 
more common in 8m to 3 yr. old. Boys show more deprivation features than girls. It is 
more noticeable if aggressive caregiving e.g. physical abuse was present before separation. 
In prolonged deprivation, separation anxiety sets in. Increased clingy behaviour, 
psychosomatic complaints, vacillation and aggression are seen in the child. 
 Privation refers to the non-formation of attachment; this is very rare and can lead to what 
Rutter termed as ‘affectionless psychopathy’ and developmental retardation. Attention 
seeking, lack of guilt, antisocial behaviour and indiscriminate attachment patterns are 
noted. This is reversible but only to some extent. 
Ethology is the systematic biological study of animal behaviour. Greek ethos - custom or habit. It 
was coined by Heinroth. Imprinting is a special primitive form of learning wherein during the 
early period of development (called critical or sensitive phase) a young animal is highly 
sensitive to a certain stimulus that provokes a specific behaviour pattern. Lorenz described the 
imprinting in goslings where a moving object in the early period of development provokes the 
following behaviour of that moving object. This is useful as almost always mother is the first 
moving object for goslings and hence they learn to follow the mother; but when Lorenz disrupted 
MAHLER’S STAGES 
1. Normal autism (0 to 2 m): Child spends most time in 
sleep as if the intrauterine aloofness continues. 
2. Symbiosis (2 to 5m): Inner and outer world studied 
via senses but perceives mother and self as one unit. 
3. Separation – individuation phase: (DPRO) 
a) Differentiation sub-phase: (5 to 10m) slowly 
appreciates the difference between mother and self 
b) Practicing sub-phase: (10 to18m) 
A gradual increase in interest on the environment; 
practices exploration. 
c) Rapprochement sub-phase: (18 to 24m) 
Alternating drives to be autonomous and 
dependent; Able to explore alone but requires 
comfort and reassurance on return. 
d) Object constancy sub-phase: (2 to 5yrs) 
Understand that the mother will not be lost if 
temporarily away; hence able to function 
independently.