The Concepts of a Critical Period and an Internal Working Model
Bowlby's Monotropic explanation?of attachment contains several ideas which have become crucial to our understanding of how early attachments can impact later relationships.
These are:
The Critical Period
The Internal Working Model (IWM)
The critical period
This is the idea that an attachment has to take place within a certain time scale, otherwise, it will never happen for the infant
It is based on the biological idea of time scales in the physiological development of a fetus
For example, the limbs of a fetus need to be shown to be developing in the fourth week of pregnancy: After day 28 if this has not happened then it will not
Bowlby?believed the same could be true for psychological development, hence the critical period for attachment
Bowlby?strongly felt that an infant needed an attachment to develop in the first 2.5 years
If it did not it would be very difficult, if not impossible for it to develop afterward, leading to problems in later childhood and adulthood
The issues with the critical period
Rutter (1998)?found, in his study of Romanian orphans that the children had been kept in horrendous conditions, with minimal contact with adults
Their ability to form attachments had been limited as a result
However, it was found that when they were adopted into stable homes, attachments did begin to form, even though some of these children were a lot older than the 2.5 years?Bowlby?discussed
Rutter?admitted that it took time and was more difficult the older the child was, however, attachments were still made with children as old as 7 or 8
Bowlby's?theory of the critical period was severely challenged
The sensitive period
As a result of these controversies as well as other research indicating Critical was too strong a concept,?Bowlby?amended the theory
He renamed it Sensitive Period
The sensitive period means it is?ideal to attach in the first 2.5?years but it is not essential
It is possible to attach later, as?Rutter?demonstrated
The Internal Working Model (IWM)
Bowlby?was a Psychodynamic psychologist for most of his career
Although his monotropic theory takes a lot from biology and evolutionary ideas, we can see traces of his background in his work on IWM and Continuity
The notion that your early childhood has an impact on later relationships is highly psychodynamic in nature
The background-continuity
Strongly linked to the idea of continuity and the fact that the early relationships that we have as an infant will have an impact on our later relationships
It has already been shown that attachment Type B's tend to have the more secure and stable relationships whereas Type A tends to be aloof and Type C clingy, leading to problems in romantic relationships and friendships alike
There is a wealth of evidence from Hazan and Shaver through to McCarthy
This idea also has face validity as it seems to make logical sense
IWM
The IWM is an internal representation of how we see ourselves as well as how we expect others to react to us
It is like a schema of ourselves: A packet of knowledge on how we view ourselves, how worthy as a person we feel we are and how we expect others to see us
These mental representations are formed in our early childhood, mostly through our interactions with our Primary Care Giver (PCG)
It will impact how we interact with others and form relationships for the rest of our lives as well as explain why we all react and behave so differently to others: Our early experience shapes us
Secure attachment and IWM
If an infant has a secure attachment, then they grow up feeling loved by their PCG and knowing they are worthy of love
Their IWM will be positive and tells them they have worth and are lovable
In later life they expect people to treat them well as this is what they experienced as an infant
If someone treats them badly, they find it easier to cope with this as they can accept it may not be their fault
They are worthy of love, and so if someone rejects them they can accept it and see that it may not be due to them: They can move on
Insecure Avoidant Attachment and IWM
If an infant has had an insecure-avoidant attachment, then they will feel ignored by their caregiver and so will ignore them back as a means to protect themselves from getting hurt
This will continue into adulthood
Their IWM will lead them to expect that they will be rejected by others and they have little self-worth
To protect themselves from hurt, they will remain aloof and not really be able to get close to others
If they feel they are about to be rejected by someone, they will probably end the relationship first (reject first) so they can deal with the loss more easily: It was me not them
As a result, the IWM makes it hard for them to have fulfilling relationships with others
Insecure Resistant Attachment and IWM
If an infant has had an insecure resistant attachment then they will have grown up believing they had to make a fuss to get attention
As they had a PCG that was ambivalent, one day loving and the next cold, they learned that crying and making a fuss was a good way to gain attention
Their IWM will form so that they believe this is how they must be in later relationships: Clingy and possessive to keep the person interested, just as they behaved to get the PCG's attention
This will make later relationships problematic as they will be too clingy and possessive and so likely drive people away from them
Yet when they are 'rejected' their IWM will make them believe that they need to try harder to 'win' the person back: In reality, this will probably make things worse
Evidence for IWM
This largely comes from the studies into continuity, which back up the issues that people have in later relationships
Mary Main?interviewed a lot of participants about their childhood and their later relationships
From this, she developed a theory of adult attachment styles
Main?found that there is a link between childhood attachment styles and adult attachment styles, so supporting the IWM
Exam Tip
To help explain Internal Working Model it may be best to use an example to really clarify what you mean.
For example,? for an Insecure avoidant person, their IWM may have formed to tell them that they are not worthy of love and so need to be wary of opening up to others as this can get them hurt. As a result, they may be aloof or shy away from close relationships as their IWM makes them believe that relationships will lead to rejection. This gives the examiner the chance to see how well you understand the theory and there is less danger of becoming muddled and losing marks as your response is lacking in clarity.