Psychology: too close for comfort

Psychology: too close for comfort

By Marc Wilson In Psychology

Remember Harry Harlow? He showed that baby monkeys choose cloth-mummy (without food) over wire-mummy (with food). Mummies, Harlow argued, are not just a source of sustenance but also providers of less-tangible comfort as well.

Fast-forward 20 years to the mid-1970s, and enter Mary Ainsworth. After working alongside English psychoanalyst John Bowlby for a while, she was inspired by his interest in the bonds between mother and child and so devised what has come to be known as the “strange situation” test.

Basically, caregivers (okay, mothers – this was the 70s) bring their 12- to ...

Get full access to Listener.co.nz

Subscribers can read the full version of this story.

You can subscribe and get full online access for as little as $5 per week.

Enjoy the high-quality, in-depth journalism of the Listener magazine with convenient online access. This includes access to thousands of archived articles and up-to-date TV and entertainment listings.

Our great content is available online even before it hits the shelves, and includes more focus on breaking news. With our responsive design you get a great reader experience whether you read from your home computer, tablet, or even smartphone.

Already a subscriber? Just to read full version of this story.

Already an existing print subscriber? As part of your magazine subscription you are entitled to receive full access to the New Zealand Listener Online content. Click here for instructions on how to redeem your digital access.

Or you can subscribe now to get unlimited access to listener.co.nz.




Leave a Reply