Demographic contexts and the adaptive role of mother-infant attachment

Human Nature Vol/Iss. 10(2) Springer-Verlag Published In Pages: 135-161
By Wiley, Andrea S., Carlin, Leslie C.

Abstract

One of the core psychological concepts of early childhood development is mother-infant attachment, an infant's drive to form a bond with one caretaker. John Bowlby identified this form of attachment as a fundamental evolved adaptation, with alternative forms of "insecure" attachment being deviations from the healthy developmental trajectory. In contrast, life-history theory emphasizes that alternative developmental trajectories can be thought of as adaptive strategies which match phenotypes to local conditions, and thus variation in infant attachment may be adaptive under different environmental conditions. Here the authors attempt to investigate whether variation in fertility and mortality rates are significant predictors of variation in infant attachment. However, they do not find enough variation to test their hypotheses since very few societies in the HRAF sample exhibit both low fertility and low mortality.

Samples

Sample Used Coded Data Comment
HRAF Collection of Ethnography (paper/fiche)Researcher's Own48 societies for which there was information on morality rates, fertility rates, and cultural practices related to infant attachment.

Documents and Hypotheses Filed By:erik.ringen