CROSS-CULTURAL STUDIES OF ATTACHMENT ORGANIZATION - RECENT STUDIES, CHANGING METHODOLOGIES, AND THE CONCEPT OF CONDITIONAL STRATEGIES

被引:438
作者
MAIN, M
机构
[1] University of California, Berkeley, CA
关键词
Assessment methods; Attachment; Conditiona behavioral strategies; Cross-cultural research; Cross-cultural validity; Culture-specific aspects; strange situation’ procedure;
D O I
10.1159/000276502
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Recent cross-cultural studies of individual differences in attachment organization are reviewed, and attention is drawn to new methods of assessment. In a speculative essay, the concept of the conditional behavioral strategy is examined. The concept suggests that individuals may be enabled through natural selection to reach the same biological ends in differing ways depending upon circumstances. A heuristic separation between primary and secondary behavioral strategies is proposed. While the attachment behavioral system is presumed continually active and context sensitive, circumstances may require manipulating the level of output usually called for by the system through secondary strategies that act to minimize or maximize that output in response to a caregiver stressing either exaggerated offspring independence or dependence. If propensities for exhibiting the primary strategy are retained under conditions that call for behaviorally substituting a secondary strategy, manipulations of cognitive processes may be involved in maintaining a given attachment organization. © 1990 S. Karger AG, Basel.
引用
收藏
页码:48 / 61
页数:14
相关论文
共 58 条
[41]   INFANT TEMPERAMENT, MOTHERS MODE OF INTERACTION, AND ATTACHMENT IN JAPAN - AN INTERIM-REPORT [J].
MIYAKE, K ;
CHEN, SJ ;
CAMPOS, JJ .
MONOGRAPHS OF THE SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1985, 50 (1-2) :276-297
[42]  
MULL DS, 1987, CHILD SURVIVAL ANTHR
[43]   INFANT ADULT ATTACHMENTS ON THE KIBBUTZ AND THEIR RELATION TO SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT 4 YEARS LATER [J].
OPPENHEIM, D ;
SAGI, A ;
LAMB, ME .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1988, 24 (03) :427-433
[44]   PATTERNS OF ATTACHMENT IN 2-YEAR-OLDS AND 3-YEAR-OLDS IN NORMAL-FAMILIES AND FAMILIES WITH PARENTAL DEPRESSION [J].
RADKEYARROW, M ;
CUMMINGS, EM ;
KUCZYNSKI, L ;
CHAPMAN, M .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1985, 56 (04) :884-893
[45]   TOWARD A GENERAL-THEORY OF INFANTILE ATTACHMENT - COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF ASPECTS OF THE SOCIAL BOND [J].
RAJECKI, DW ;
LAMB, ME ;
OBMASCHER, P .
BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 1978, 1 (03) :417-436
[46]   SECURITY OF INFANT-MOTHER, INFANT-FATHER, AND INFANT-METAPELET ATTACHMENTS AMONG KIBBUTZ-REARED ISRAELI CHILDREN [J].
SAGI, A ;
LAMB, ME ;
LEWKOWICZ, KS ;
SHOHAM, R ;
DVIR, R ;
ESTES, D .
MONOGRAPHS OF THE SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1985, 50 (1-2) :257-275
[47]   BORN TO DIE - WITCHCRAFT AND INFANTICIDE IN BARIBA CULTURE [J].
SARGENT, CF .
ETHNOLOGY, 1988, 27 (01) :79-95
[48]  
Scheper-Hughes Nancy., 1987, CHILD SURVIVAL ANTHR
[49]   INFANT-MORTALITY AND BEHAVIOR IN REGULATION OF FAMILY-SIZE [J].
SCRIMSHAW, SCM .
POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, 1978, 4 (03) :383-403
[50]   GROUP SELECTION + KIN SELECTION [J].
SMITH, JM ;
WYNNEEDWARDS, VC .
NATURE, 1964, 201 (492) :1145-&