Security of Attachment and the Social Development of Cognition

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A01=Elizabeth Meins
AAI Classification
AAI Classification System
Acquisitional Style
attached
Author_Elizabeth Meins
Category=JMC
Category=JMR
Child's Symbolic Play
Child’s Symbolic Play
developmental psychology
early attachment impact on cognition
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experimenter's Suggestion
Experimenter’s Suggestion
Frozen Phrases
group
ijzendoom
Infant Caregiver Attachment Relationship
infant-mother interaction
insecure
Insecure Attachment Groups
Insecure Avoidant Children
Insecure Group
insecurely
Interpsychological Plane
Junk Object
language development
maternal
Maternal AAI
Maternal Mind Mindedness
Maternal Sensitivity
Multi-word Utterances
Picture Identification Task
Referential Children
relationship
Representational Toy
secure
Secure Attachment Relationship
Secure Base Behaviour
Secure Infant Mother Attachment
sensitivity
Sensori Motor Development
social cognition
Strange Situation Procedure
theory of mind
Unexpected Transfer Task
van
Vygotskian framework

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138877115
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Jun 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Security of Attachment and the Social Development of Cognition investigates how children's security of attachment in infancy is related to various aspects of their cognitive development over the preschool years. The book thus constitutes an ambitious attempt to build bridges between the domains of social and cognitive development, and as such addresses issues which are of increasing interest to developmental psychologists. In the first two chapters, Meins outlines Bowlby's attachment theory and the research which it has inspired, and develops the theme of a secure attachment relationship providing children with a sense of themselves as effective agents in their interactions with the world (self-efficacy).
The next five chapters describe a longitudinal study of a sample of children whose security of attachment was assessed in infancy. Security-related differences are reported in the areas of object/person permanence, language acquisition, symbolic play, maternal tutoring and theory of mind, but no differences were found in general cognitive ability. Meins argues that the wide-ranging advantages enjoyed by the securely attached children are best explained in terms of their greater self-efficacy and social flexibility, nurtured by a particular kind of early infant-mother interaction.
This book's major contribution is in its approach to explaining why securely attached children may be more self-effective and flexible in social interactions. Meins attempts to account for these differences within a Vygotskian framework, focusing on the secure dyad's greater ability to function within the zone of proximal development. She suggests that a mother's mind-mindedness (the propensity to treat one's infant as an individual with a mind) is an important factor in determining her ability to interact sensitively with her child. In the final chapter, Meins considers how the Vygotskian approach can complement and extend existing theories of attachment, and suggests some ways in which future research might address outstanding questions in this rapidly advancing field.

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