When compared to children who were insecurely attached as infants children who were securely attached as infants tend to?

Recommended textbook solutions

When compared to children who were insecurely attached as infants children who were securely attached as infants tend to?

Psychology: Principles in Practice

1st EditionSpencer A. Rathus

1,024 solutions

When compared to children who were insecurely attached as infants children who were securely attached as infants tend to?

Myers' Psychology for the AP Course

3rd EditionC. Nathan DeWall, David G Myers

955 solutions

When compared to children who were insecurely attached as infants children who were securely attached as infants tend to?

Psychology

1st EditionArlene Lacombe, Kathryn Dumper, Rose Spielman, William Jenkins

580 solutions

When compared to children who were insecurely attached as infants children who were securely attached as infants tend to?

A Concise Introduction to Logic

12th EditionPatrick J. Hurley

1,933 solutions

What is the difference between a securely attached infant and a insecurely attached infant?

For example, securely attached infant are associated with sensitive and responsive primary care. Insecure ambivalent attached infants are associated with inconsistent primary care. Sometimes the child's needs and met, and sometimes they are ignored by the mother / father.

How would a securely attached infant's behavior differ from that of an insecurely attached infant when both are placed in the Strange Situation?

Typically, a child's response to the Strange Situation follows one of four patterns. The securely-attached child explores the room freely when his mother is present. He may be distressed when his mother leaves, and he explores less when she is absent. But he is happy when she returns.

What are the characteristics of a insecurely attached child?

Common to all insecurely attached children is the inability to use one's parent as a secure base and safe haven, and negative beliefs about the availability and accessibility of caregivers, but insecurity is manifested in different ways (Cassidy, 1994; Main, Kaplan, & Cassidy, 1985).

What are the long term difference between securely and insecurely attached infants?

One of the most important—and, to some ways of thinking, paradoxical—findings was that a secure attachment early in life led to greater independence later, whereas an insecure attachment led to a child being more dependent later in life.