Thursday 12 January 2012

Pillars in the Making - Jan 2012

How do infants become attached? (Part 2)

Last month, I have shared with you what is attachment, and how it would affect baby’s emotional development. There are a lot of psychologists studied infant’s attach behavior, and they all believe that this particular behavior do help children in their future development in a lot of areas. Babies have an internal sense of deciding which object or subject they want to form attachment with. In this issue, I would like to share with you about a popular research on attachment called “wire mother experiment”.

The experiment of “wire mother” 

In 1960, Harry Harlow, an American psychologist, did an experiment to demonstrate how powerful the effect of love was. A young monkey was involved in his experiment, and the aim was to find out which types of object this monkey tended to be attached with.

The materials used to conduct this experiment involved two surrogate mothers that were designed with a simple facial shape. The main difference between both “mothers” was that one of them was covered with a thick layer of towel on its body; we can simply call her a fat mother. The other one was not covered with towel but a layer of wire and it was inserted with milk bottles on its breast, we can simply call her thin mother. This baby monkey could get food from thin mother, but it could not get any food from fat mother. The main purpose for this experiment was to find out which “surrogate mother” this monkey would hug on while experienced different conditions, e.g. Fear.

Throughout the experiment, Harlow has observed that the young monkey loved to stay with fat mother most of the time except when feeling hungry. If the young monkey was experiencing fearful situation, it refused to separate from fat mother.

Harlow conducted a further research to observe the young monkey’s response if fat mother disappeared after they were staying in the same room for thirty minutes. When separated from fat mother, young monkey felt anxious, fear and started to cry for fat mother back.

What does this research tell us?

From the first experiment, Harlow found that young monkey was hugging fat mother most of the time, it would only go to thin mother when it needed for food. The second research shows that once young monkey has formed attachment with fat mother, a security base would be formed between them. Both results can proof that attachment is vital for children’s development and they tend to form attachment with comfortable things or people. Without attachment, they easily feel fear and anxious and lose security feeling. So remember to spend more time with your kids, or baby brother & sister, if you have one.       

Vicky Wong
References:
Cherry, K. (2006, 7 24). An Overview of Attachment Theory. Retrieved from About.com.Psychology:http://psychology.about.com/od/loveandattraction/a/attachment01.htm
Mcleod, S. (2007 , 4 12). Bowlby Attachment Theory. Retrieved from http://www.simplypsychology.org/bowlby.html

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