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REVISE Attachment in 29 MINS (AQA A-level Psychology)

7 medium multiple-choice questions linking video sections to applied reasoning on attachment (AQA A-level topics).

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millie clarke
Published May 27, 2026

Quiz Questions & Answers

Review every prompt, the correct responses, and helpful context to prep for your own run-through.

Question 1: Which caregiver–infant interaction pattern described in the video is most strongly linked to later secure attachment?

Unilateral feeding interactions — caregiver directs all behaviour

Random, unsynchronised play — fosters independence and security

Still-face only — infant immediately recovers when caregiver looks away

Interactional synchrony — coordinated timing and mirroring

Question 2: According to the staged model summarised, what is a main feature of the 'discriminate/specific' stage of attachment?

No social behaviours; purely reflexive responses

Proximity to one primary caregiver with separation and stranger anxiety

Infants accept care from anyone without preference

Multiple equally strong attachments to many adults

Question 3: Which point about fathers does the video emphasise as most important for predicting attachment quality?

Fathers' involvement mainly delays attachment formation

Caregiver sensitivity and responsiveness matter more than parent gender

Fathers cannot form true attachments due to biology

Only mothers' oxytocin changes predict attachment

Question 4: Which animal finding from the video most directly challenged the 'cupboard love' idea that feeding is the basis of attachment?

Harlow’s monkeys preferred soft surrogate mothers over wire ones that provided milk

Feeding always produces stronger bonds than tactile contact

Lorenz found goslings imprinted only after being fed by a human

Animals never show critical periods for social bonding

Question 5: What major shortcoming of learning theory (cupboard love) is highlighted in the video?

It ignores biological predispositions and contact comfort evidence

It predicts universal stages of attachment across cultures

It requires animal isolation to work experimentally

It overemphasises genetic inheritance of attachment styles

Question 6: Which element of Bowlby’s monotropic/ethological theory explains why early caregiver sensitivity influences later relationships?

Operant reinforcement — rewarding good behaviour builds bonds

Critical hunger reflex — infants require constant feeding to attach

Behavioural imprinting on the food source

Internal working model — a mental template shaping future relationships

Question 7: Which methodological trade-off did the video present as a strength of longitudinal naturalistic attachment studies?

Complete experimental control over all variables

Easier ethical approval because no interventions are used

High ecological validity by observing real caregiver–infant interactions over time

Guaranteed absence of observer bias due to long timescales