Harry Harlow, famous for his experiments with rhesus monkeys and cloth and wire mothers, was visited by psychiatrist and psychoanalyst John Bowlby and by child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim in 1958. They made similar observations of Harlow's monkeys, yet their interpretations were strikingly different. Bettelheim saw Harlow's wire mother as a perfect example of the 'refrigerator mother', causing autism in her child, while Bowlby saw Harlow's results as an explanation of how socio-emotional development was dependent on responsiveness of the mother to the child's biological needs. Bettelheim's solution was to remove the mother, while Bowlby specifically wanted to involve her in treatment. Harlow was very critical of Bettelheim, but evaluated ...
Seymour Levine\u27s first “early experience” experiments were inspired by Freud. Yet, Levine\u27s li...
Drawing on the correspondence Ursula Bowlby wrote to John Bowlby following thebirth of their first c...
This chapter discusses the contribution of John Bowlby’s more than fifty years of thinking about att...
Harry Harlow, famous for his experiments with rhesus monkeys and cloth and wire mothers, was visited...
For eons, love was the province of poets and dreamers. Scientists considered it unworthy of real stu...
With respect to the ethical debate about the treatment of animals in biomedical and behavioral resea...
John Bowlby and James Robertson, two men who were extremely influential in the latter part of the 20...
Seeking a scientific basis for understanding and treating mental illness, and inspired by the work o...
Mary Ainsworth’s pioneering work has changed conceptions of infant-mother relationships, and by exte...
The animal welfare movement was empowered by decades of animal studies focused on the ontogeny of ps...
If John Martyn Harlow is known at all in the neurosciences, it is because he was the physician who a...
Attachment theory, developed by child psychiatrist John Bowlby, is considered a major theory in deve...
Attachment theory, developed by child psychiatrist John Bowlby, is considered a major theory in deve...
If growth is to proceed smoothly, the tissues [of the embryo] must be exposed to the influence of th...
developmental psychology, and psychoanalysts, John Bowlby formulated the basic tenets of the theory....
Seymour Levine\u27s first “early experience” experiments were inspired by Freud. Yet, Levine\u27s li...
Drawing on the correspondence Ursula Bowlby wrote to John Bowlby following thebirth of their first c...
This chapter discusses the contribution of John Bowlby’s more than fifty years of thinking about att...
Harry Harlow, famous for his experiments with rhesus monkeys and cloth and wire mothers, was visited...
For eons, love was the province of poets and dreamers. Scientists considered it unworthy of real stu...
With respect to the ethical debate about the treatment of animals in biomedical and behavioral resea...
John Bowlby and James Robertson, two men who were extremely influential in the latter part of the 20...
Seeking a scientific basis for understanding and treating mental illness, and inspired by the work o...
Mary Ainsworth’s pioneering work has changed conceptions of infant-mother relationships, and by exte...
The animal welfare movement was empowered by decades of animal studies focused on the ontogeny of ps...
If John Martyn Harlow is known at all in the neurosciences, it is because he was the physician who a...
Attachment theory, developed by child psychiatrist John Bowlby, is considered a major theory in deve...
Attachment theory, developed by child psychiatrist John Bowlby, is considered a major theory in deve...
If growth is to proceed smoothly, the tissues [of the embryo] must be exposed to the influence of th...
developmental psychology, and psychoanalysts, John Bowlby formulated the basic tenets of the theory....
Seymour Levine\u27s first “early experience” experiments were inspired by Freud. Yet, Levine\u27s li...
Drawing on the correspondence Ursula Bowlby wrote to John Bowlby following thebirth of their first c...
This chapter discusses the contribution of John Bowlby’s more than fifty years of thinking about att...