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    BOWLBY‚ HOFER & TRONICK’S VIEWS ON INFANTS DEVELOPMENT OF PARENTAL LOVE AND ITS EFFECTS IN LATTER LIFE John Bowlby‚ the father of the Attachment Theory‚ has left an indelible mark in the field of Developmental Psychiatry‚ drawing most of his inferences from studies of infant interactions with others. Dissatisfied with traditional theories of infant-parent interactions‚ he turned to evolutionary biology‚ ethology‚ developmental psychology‚ cognitive science and control systems theory for inspiration

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    Detachment. Detachment describes the way a child reacts to their attachment figure after being separated from her for a time period and then meets her again. Children who had been separated from their attachment figure for days or weeks‚ when reunited with their attachment figure showed detachment behaviors. Detachment behaviors are: no recognition of the attachment figure; turning away and/or walking away from the attachment figure; crying or coming close to crying; and an expressionless face

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    the next generation” (Buss‚ 2008). Specialists such as Bowlby claim that humans have a predisposition to form attachment bonds to others in order to survive.

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    children? ’ ‚ Social Work Education‚ 13: 2‚ 74-85 Belsky J Bick‚ E. (1964) Notes on infant observation in psychoanalytic training‚ International Journal of Psychoanalysis‚ 45‚ pp. 484- 486. Bion‚ W. R. (1962) Learning From Experience‚ London: Maresfield. Bowlby‚ J. (1969) Attachment and Loss. London: Hogarth Press Briggs‚ S Briggs‚ S.(1999) ’Links between infant observation and reflective social work practice ’‚ Journal of Social Work Practice‚ 13: 2‚ 147- 156. Butler‚ I. & Roberts‚ G. (2004) Social work

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    * Introduction The Ward was a movie that talked about Alice who was suffering from Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). The movie begun with a young lady-Kristen that caught by polices after burning down an old farmhouse and then was sent and locked in the North Bend Psychiatric Hospital. At there‚ Kristen met Dr. Gerald Stringer-a psychiatrist and also Emily‚ Sarah‚ Zoey and Iris-other personalities. After some procedure of body checking‚ Kristen was put into a room that belonged to Tammy-a personality

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    Attachment Paper

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    Abstract Clinical research has demonstrated that there is a direct correlation between the parent-child attachment and the psychodynamics of adult relationships. The theory of attachment‚ by John Bowlby‚ has been instrumental in the advancement of modern psychology. Bowlby’s attachment theory provides a strong framework for the comprehension of both the nature of close relationships and the link between the associations of children and how this

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    cynical view of infants‚ including John Bowlby (1969‚ 1973). He disregarded Freud ’s theory of attachment believing instead‚ that a child is born biologically pre-disposed to become attached to its mother for two important reasons; first the need for comfort‚ and second‚ the fear of the unknown‚ both of which are characteristics that can be observed in all children. Bowlby ’s conjecture

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    defined as the "lasting psychological connectedness between human beings". It can also be defined as an emotional bond with a specific person that is enduring across time and space. Attachment Theory The Attachment theory‚ initially proposed by John Bowlby‚ specifically makes the claim that the ability for an individual to form an emotional and physical "attachment" to another person gives a sense of stability and security necessary to take risks‚ branch out‚ and grow and develop as a personality. The

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    * “Bowlby’s theory of attachment is an evolutionary theory that suggests the behaviours demonstrated by caregivers and babies are an innate and indistinctive drive to form attachment and have evolved through natural selection. * According to Bowlby‚ forming an attachment enables an infant to explore the world whilst having a secure base for protection; when babies tend to form an attachment with a special importance‚ it is known as‚ “primary attachment” which is also called montropy which is

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    Structural Theory

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    Structural functionalism concentrates on the positive and negative functions of social structures. Societal functionalism is a particular type of structural functionalism that aims to explain the role of social structures and institutions in society‚ the relationship between these structures‚ and the manner in which these structures constrain the actions of individuals. According to structural functionalists‚ individuals have little to no control over the ways in which particular structures operate

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