By placing children in this situation, Ainsworth revealed the profound effects of attachment on behavior.
This theory proposes that the emotional and social development of an infant is shaped by their relationship with their primary caregiver.
Responsive caregivers create this kind of base to which the infant feels like they can safely return to when learning to explore their environment.
Mental representations of self and others based on early attachment experiences form which type of working models?
Caregivers who exhibit this pattern of behavior are sometimes responsive to their child and sometimes neglectful.
Attachment styles that are consistent over time but not permanent are considered to be moderately _______.
Avoidant adults are less willing to accept their partners flaws, and show more _______.
Ambivalent adults tend to be emotionally unstable, jealous, clingy, and ________.
Konrad Lorenz viewed attachment as innate based on which behavior in animals?
Individuals with secure attachment typically have ______ relationships as adults.
Freudian psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and learning theory were the prevailing ideas during the early-mid years of which century?
Crying, smiling, and following actions of an infant are intended to promote what to the attachment figure?
Our experiences with our attachment figures can shape how we form attachments in which stage of life?
Bowlbys ideas challenged the prevailing belief that infants attachment to mothers was based on the provision of which need?
True or false: Attachment styles in the workplace are the same as in personal relationships.
This is how a child with insecure/avoidant attachment reacts when their caregiver leaves/returns.
Self-reported secure adults also say their relationships are more friendly, trusting, and ________.