FAD2230 Unit II Exam | Questions And Answers Latest {2024- 2025} A+ Graded | 100%
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love - -strong affection for one another arising out of kinship or personal ties.
-An enduring (over a course of time) bond between two or more people.
-Based on mutual affection.
-Includes a feeling of obligation toward another.
"Languages of love" (Gary chapman) - -words of affirmation.
-acts of service.
-receiving gifts.
-quality time.
-Physical touch.
Ainsworth's Strange situation--goes with attachment theory - Means to measure "attachment style" in
kids.
-Mom and baby are both in room, and then the mom leaves, then they are reunited
secure base - -describes how the primary caregiver (typically the mama) is attached to her baby or, in
more technical terms, maternal-infant attachment patterns. Within this phenomenon, the primary
caregiver, serves as a "secure base" for the baby's exploration of his physical environment.
-Attachment - -Use of a person as a secure base from which to explore.
-A haven for safety of comfort when needed.
-Do all children have attachment security? NO.
-70% of children are securely attached to their caregivers.
Micro theory - -If we learn early in life that we can't trust our caregivers, then we have trust issues in
relationships later in life.
,attachment theory: John Bolby and Mary Ainsworth - -.the way infants for attach early in life affects
relationships throughout later life.
-Our childhood attachment style teaches us about people of the world, and this carries on into adult
relationships.
secure attachment - infants feel safe when their mothers are out of sight. easy to fall in love later in life.
anxious/ambivalent - -infants become nervous when their parent leaves the room and shows rejection
when the parent returns. needs constant reassurance.
-15%).- might be clingy even before the parent leaves, and when the parent returns, they cling to the
parent but they aren't comforted.
Anxious Avoidant - -15%).- distance between the child and caregiver. When the parent left, the child
wanted them back, but when the parent returns, they were not interested in their secure base (wanted
to be help but wouldn't grab on or make eye contact).
12 century - first precursor to the notion of love.
romantic love - characterized by passion, drama, and excitement.
Attachment secuirity - -confidence that the secure person...
compassionate love - type of love that grows overtime, based on strong commitment, friendship, and
trust.
Courtley love - a poetic style of the middle ages when poets or troubsdous would write songs of
unrequited love and present them at the court of their aristocratic/royal masters.
avoid attachment - -infant shows little attachment to the primary parent. builds brick wall.
Disorganized/fearful - -Contradictory behaviors like fear, or inconsistent responses to the caregiver.
Sometimes they might be comforted, sometimes they might not even walk up to the caregiver.
, Feminization of love - The process beginning on the 19th century in which love become associated with
the private work of women in the home, namely, nurturing and caring for their family members.
Romantic love - A type of love characterized by passion, melodrama, and excitement that receives a lot
of media attention.
companionate love - grows over time, based on strong commitment, friendship, and trust.
sociobiology - -theory that all humans have an instinctive impulse to pass on their genetic material.
controlling the development of love - a macro-level perspective on love suggesting that all societies
control or channel love.
Steinberg's triangle theory of love - -intimacy, passion, and commitment.
-3 components develop at different times.
Oxytocin - -The "love" or "cuddle" hormone.
-Released from sex., or also just closeness of friendships
Sternberg's love types - -Liking.
-Comsumate love.
-Companionate love.
-Empty love.
-Romantic love.
-Fatuous love.
Liking - intimacy.
consumate love - equal levels of all three.
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