Bowlby’s Attachment Theory & Ainsworth’s Strange Situation
A visual secure-base atlas for mastering monotropy, internal working models, attachment styles, cultural variation, modern critique and exam answers.
What are Bowlby’s attachment theory and Ainsworth’s Strange Situation?
Bowlby’s attachment theory explains infant-caregiver bonds as an evolved survival system: babies seek proximity to caregivers when threatened, use them as a secure base for exploration, and build an internal working model of self and relationships. Ainsworth’s Strange Situation is a controlled observation that tests this bond through separation, reunion, stranger anxiety and exploration. It originally classified infants as secure, insecure-avoidant or insecure-resistant/ambivalent; disorganised attachment was added later by Main and Solomon.
Your study route through the attachment system
A baby does not cling because it is spoiled. It clings because, in evolutionary terms, distance from the caregiver once meant danger. John Bowlby turned that simple observation into one of the most important theories in developmental psychology: attachment is not a side effect of feeding, but a biological system for safety, emotion regulation and exploration.
Mary Ainsworth then did what great science often does: she made the invisible pattern observable. Her Strange Situation placed infants in a mildly stressful laboratory sequence involving separations and reunions. The crucial question was not whether the baby cried, but how the baby used the caregiver when the caregiver returned.
This guide gives you the exam version and the smarter modern version. You will learn the clean textbook theory, the Strange Situation classifications, and the careful caveats: culture matters, temperament matters, attachment is not destiny, and internet “attachment style” quizzes are not the same as developmental attachment science.
Bowlby + Ainsworth in One Table
| Main figures | John Bowlby developed attachment theory; Mary Ainsworth operationalised infant attachment through the Strange Situation. |
|---|---|
| Core idea | Attachment is an evolved emotional bond that keeps infants close to caregivers during threat and allows safe exploration when calm. |
| Bowlby concepts | Monotropy, critical/sensitive period, social releasers, secure base, internal working model, continuity hypothesis. |
| Ainsworth method | Controlled observation of infants, usually around 12-18 months, across eight episodes involving caregiver, stranger, separation and reunion. |
| Original styles | Secure (B), insecure-avoidant (A), insecure-resistant/ambivalent (C). |
| Later addition | Disorganised/disoriented (D), introduced by Mary Main and Judith Solomon for contradictory or confused behaviour. |
| Best exam evaluation | Strong method and predictive value, but culture-bound, short-lab-snapshot, temperament and caregiver-focus criticisms must be included. |
| Modern verdict | Attachment is powerful but probabilistic. Early bonds influence later relationships; they do not permanently determine personality. |
Bowlby’s Theory: Five Claims
IASNOVA.COMBowlby rejected the simple learning-theory idea that babies love mothers because mothers provide food. Influenced by ethology, psychoanalysis and evolutionary thinking, he argued that infants are born with an attachment behavioural system. Crying, smiling, clinging and following are not random behaviours. They are social releasers that draw caregivers close.
For exams, learn Bowlby’s theory as five linked claims. If you can explain these in your own words, you can answer almost any Bowlby question.
Attachment is innate
Infants are biologically prepared to seek closeness to caregivers because proximity improves survival.
Monotropy
Bowlby argued that one special attachment, usually to the mother figure, has unique emotional importance.
Critical period
There is a limited early window for forming strong attachments. Modern wording often says sensitive period.
Secure base
The caregiver is a base from which the child explores and a haven to return to under stress.
Working model
Early relationships create expectations about self, others and future relationships.
The Attachment Loop: From Threat to Exploration
Internal Working Model: The Mind’s First Relationship Map
IASNOVA.COMBowlby’s most powerful idea is the internal working model: the child builds a mental template of relationships from early caregiver experience. It contains beliefs like “Am I worthy of care?”, “Are others available?”, and “What happens when I need help?”
This is why attachment theory matters beyond infancy. Bowlby predicted a continuity hypothesis: early attachment can influence later friendships, emotion regulation, parenting and romantic relationships. Modern researchers treat this as probabilistic, not deterministic.
Secure working model
“When I need support, someone responds. I can explore because I can return.” This supports confidence, trust and flexible emotion regulation.
Avoidant strategy
“Showing need may not help.” The child may minimise visible distress and focus on objects or self-control.
Resistant strategy
“Care is unpredictable.” The child may maximise distress, cling and resist comfort because availability feels uncertain.
Disorganised collapse
“The person I need may also frighten me.” Behaviour can become contradictory, frozen, dazed or confused.
Do not write “attachment style decides adult personality forever.” Write: “The internal working model creates expectations that can show continuity, but later experience can revise these patterns.”
Ainsworth’s Strange Situation: Method and Logic
IASNOVA.COMAinsworth’s Strange Situation is a controlled observation designed to activate the attachment system without creating extreme distress. The infant is placed in an unfamiliar room with toys, the caregiver enters and leaves, a stranger appears, and the caregiver returns. The key measure is reunion behaviour: does the child seek comfort, avoid the caregiver, resist contact, or show contradictory behaviour?
The Strange Situation Timeline
Attachment Styles: A, B, C and D
IASNOVA.COMAinsworth’s original system had three categories. The secure infant is not the infant who never cries; secure infants may protest separation strongly. What matters is that the caregiver can comfort them on return and the child can go back to exploration. Later researchers added a fourth category, disorganised attachment, for infants whose behaviour does not form a coherent strategy.
Secure attachment
In room: explores when caregiver is present; may show distress during separation.
Reunion: seeks contact, is comforted, then returns to play. Caregiver works as secure base and safe haven.
Insecure-avoidant
In room: appears independent, explores without much reference to caregiver.
Reunion: avoids or ignores caregiver. This may mask distress rather than show true calm.
Insecure-resistant / ambivalent
In room: anxious, limited exploration, strong distress at separation.
Reunion: seeks contact but resists comfort; clings, cries, pushes away or remains angry.
Disorganised / disoriented
In room: no coherent strategy; may freeze, approach then avoid, or show confused movement.
Note: added later by Main and Solomon, not one of Ainsworth’s original three categories.
The Four Behaviour Axes in the Strange Situation
Evaluation: Strengths and Limitations
IASNOVA.COMAttachment is one of psychology’s strongest developmental traditions, but exam answers must be balanced. Praise the precision and real-world applications, then evaluate culture, temperament, determinism and method.
- Testable theory. Bowlby’s ideas generated measurable predictions about separation, reunion and later development.
- Controlled observation. The Strange Situation has a standardised procedure, supporting reliability.
- Rich behavioural coding. It examines exploration, proximity, contact, avoidance and resistance rather than one simple score.
- Practical impact. Attachment research shaped childcare, hospital visiting, adoption, fostering and parenting interventions.
- Predictive value. Meta-analyses link insecure and especially disorganised attachment with later behaviour risks, though effects are moderate.
- Culture-bound method. A short separation from the mother has different meanings across cultures and childcare norms.
- Temperament critique. Some behaviour may reflect infant temperament, not only caregiving history.
- Mother-focus. Bowlby’s monotropy can understate fathers, siblings, grandparents and multiple attachment networks.
- Snapshot problem. A 20-minute lab sequence may not capture the whole relationship.
- Determinism risk. Attachment predicts tendencies, not a fixed life script.
- Ethical issue. The procedure deliberately produces mild infant stress through separation and stranger presence.
For a 16-mark AQA answer, evaluate both Bowlby’s theory and Ainsworth’s method. Students often lose marks by describing attachment styles well but forgetting culture, temperament and determinism.
Cultural Variation: Attachment Is Universal, Expression Is Local
IASNOVA.COMVan IJzendoorn and Kroonenberg’s 1988 meta-analysis of Strange Situation studies is a favourite exam evaluation point. It found that secure attachment was the most common classification across studied countries, supporting the idea that attachment is widespread. But the patterns of insecure attachment varied: German samples showed more avoidant classifications, while Japanese and Israeli samples showed more resistant classifications.
The smartest interpretation is not “some cultures attach wrongly.” It is that the Strange Situation was developed in a Western context and may read culturally normal behaviours through a narrow lens. A child used to constant caregiver proximity may find separation unusually stressful; a child socialised toward early independence may look avoidant.
Three Layers of Attachment Evidence
Modern Corrections: What Students Should Not Overclaim
IASNOVA.COM“Attachment is the same as attachment parenting.”
No. Attachment theory is a developmental science framework. “Attachment parenting” is a popular parenting philosophy and is not identical to Bowlby-Ainsworth attachment research.
“Secure babies never cry.”
Wrong. Secure infants can cry during separation. The key is that they are able to use the caregiver for comfort and return to exploration after reunion.
“Avoidant babies are simply independent.”
Avoidant behaviour may look calm, but physiological studies and theory suggest distress may be masked or minimised.
“Your attachment style is permanent.”
Attachment shows continuity, but it can change. Later relationships, trauma, therapy, parenting and social context can revise working models.
“Adult attachment quizzes are the Strange Situation.”
No. Ainsworth’s procedure classifies infant-caregiver attachment through observation. Adult self-report styles are related but different measurement traditions.
Key Terms Glossary
IASNOVA.COMEssential vocabulary for exam answers
- Attachment
- A close emotional bond between infant and caregiver, shown by proximity seeking, distress on separation and comfort on reunion.
- Monotropy
- Bowlby’s claim that one primary attachment relationship has special emotional importance for development.
- Critical period / sensitive period
- The early window in which attachment formation is especially important. Modern psychology often prefers “sensitive period” because development is flexible.
- Social releasers
- Infant behaviours such as crying and smiling that trigger caregiving responses in adults.
- Secure base
- The caregiver as a source of safety from which the child can explore and to which the child can return under stress.
- Safe haven
- The caregiver’s role as comfort and protection when the infant is frightened, tired or distressed.
- Internal working model
- A mental template of self, others and relationships built from early attachment experience.
- Continuity hypothesis
- The prediction that early attachment patterns influence later relationships, emotion regulation and parenting.
- Strange Situation
- Ainsworth’s controlled observation used to assess attachment quality through separation, reunion, stranger anxiety and exploration.
- Disorganised attachment
- A later classification for contradictory, confused or disoriented behaviour, often discussed in relation to fear or unresolved caregiver threat.
Practice Exam Questions
IASNOVA.COMEight Questions Across Exam Formats
Everything You Need to Remember
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Bowlby’s attachment theory in simple terms?
Bowlby’s attachment theory says babies are biologically prepared to form close bonds with caregivers because staying near a protective adult improves survival. This bond also supports emotional regulation and exploration.
What is Ainsworth’s Strange Situation?
It is a controlled observation in which infants experience short separations and reunions with a caregiver in an unfamiliar room. Their behaviour is used to classify attachment style.
What are the three original attachment styles?
The three original Ainsworth classifications are secure attachment, insecure-avoidant attachment and insecure-resistant or ambivalent attachment.
Who added disorganised attachment?
Mary Main and Judith Solomon added the disorganised/disoriented category for infants who show confused, contradictory or disoriented behaviour in the Strange Situation.
What is the difference between secure and insecure attachment?
Secure infants use the caregiver as a reliable secure base and safe haven. Insecure infants show avoidant, resistant or disorganised strategies when dealing with separation and reunion stress.
Is the Strange Situation culturally biased?
It can be. The procedure was developed in a Western context, and separation or stranger anxiety can have different meanings across cultures, childcare systems and family practices.
Does early attachment predict adult relationships?
It can influence later relationships through internal working models, but it does not determine them. Later experiences can strengthen, weaken or revise attachment expectations.
How should I evaluate Bowlby in an exam?
Use evidence from Ainsworth, Harlow and later longitudinal work, then criticise monotropy, determinism, culture bias, temperament effects and the importance of multiple attachments.
Selected references and further reading
- Bowlby, J. (1958). The nature of the child’s tie to his mother. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 39, 350-373.
- Bowlby, J. (1969/1982). Attachment and Loss, Vol. 1: Attachment. Basic Books.
- Ainsworth, M. D. S., & Bell, S. M. (1970). Attachment, exploration, and separation: Illustrated by the behavior of one-year-olds in a strange situation. Child Development, 41(1), 49-67.
- Ainsworth, M. D. S., Blehar, M. C., Waters, E., & Wall, S. (1978). Patterns of Attachment: A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation. Erlbaum.
- Main, M., & Solomon, J. (1986/1990). Work introducing the disorganised/disoriented attachment classification.
- van IJzendoorn, M. H., & Kroonenberg, P. M. (1988). Cross-cultural patterns of attachment: A meta-analysis of the Strange Situation. Child Development, 59, 147-156.
- Fearon, R. P., Bakermans-Kranenburg, M. J., van IJzendoorn, M. H., Lapsley, A. M., & Roisman, G. I. (2010). The significance of insecure attachment and disorganization in the development of children’s externalizing behavior: A meta-analytic study. Child Development, 81(2), 435-456.
- AQA (2026). A-level Psychology 7182: Attachment content in Paper 1, Introductory Topics in Psychology.
- College Board (2025-26). AP Psychology Course and Exam Description: Development and Learning; Social-Emotional Development.
