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What Psychologist Research Has Shown Us About Cross-Cultural Variations in Attachment

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What Psychologist Research Has Shown Us About Cross-Cultural Variations in Attachment Researchers in many different countries have used the Strange Situation to investigate secure and insecure attachment. The results of 32 such studies undertaken in eight different countries have been summarised by Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg (1988). Bee (1999) points out that the most striking finding is that there is considerable consistency across cultures, and concludes that it is likely that the same caregiver-infant interactions contribute to secure and insecure attachments in all cultures. However, fours countries stand out in this research as having a larger than average proportion of insecurely …show more content…

If the infants weren’t as distressed, many more (possibly more than 80%) would have been classified as securely attached. This causes not just one cross-cultural variation. The findings suggest that there were actually two cross cultural variations. The first being the way in which the infants responded to separation and being left alone. This maybe due to the fact that Japanese infants experience much less separation, they generally sleep with their parents until over 2 years of age, are carried around on their mothers’ backs and bathe with their parents. As a result, Japanese children are rarely left alone. This means that for Japanese children, the Strange Situation was more than mildly stressful, they were suffering extreme stress – this was not the original aim of the Strange Situation. Secondly, Japanese infants shoed a total lack of avoidant behaviour in this sample; this is another cultural factor. Japanese children are taught that such behaviour is impolite and are actively discouraged from displaying it. This means that the strange Situation does not have the same meaning for Japanese children as it does for American participants and is therefore, not a valid assessment of that culture, Takahashi proved this. The Strange Situation measurement assumes that

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