Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation Procedure
The Strange Situation is a structured observational procedure developed by Mary Ainsworth to study attachment between infants, typically aged 12-18 months, and their primary caregivers. The procedure involves a sequence of events in a toy-filled room: the caregiver and infant are initially alone, then a stranger enters, the caregiver leaves the infant with the stranger, and finally, the caregiver returns to comfort the infant. An infant's reactions throughout these stages, especially during the reunion, are analyzed to determine their attachment style.
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Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation Procedure
A team of researchers wants to study how pairs of friends collaborate to solve a problem. They bring each pair into a laboratory, give them a 15-minute time limit, and provide them with a complex puzzle to assemble. The researchers then watch from behind a one-way mirror and code the participants' verbal and nonverbal interactions. Which research method does this scenario best describe?
A researcher wants to understand how young children share toys. The researcher sets up a playroom in a laboratory, provides a specific set of toys, and invites pairs of children who do not know each other to play for 15 minutes. The researcher then records how many times the children offer toys to one another. Which research method does this scenario best describe?
Benefits of Structured Observation
Limitations of Structured Observation
Example of Structured Observation: Pace of Life
Example of Structured Observation: Culture of Honor
Quantitative Emphasis of Structured Observation
Settings in Structured Observation
Behavioral Coding
In psychological research, which of the following best describes a structured observation?
A researcher is studying social interaction in a laboratory playroom. Match each part of the study's design with the characteristic of the research method it best represents.
A psychologist is designing a study to observe how students respond to a difficult puzzle in a laboratory setting. To correctly apply the structured observation method, in what order should the researcher perform the following steps?
A developmental psychologist observes children during their regular school recess and writes a detailed narrative of all their social interactions. If the researcher then brings the same children into a lab to observe how they respond to a specific 'sharing' game and records only the number of shared items, this second study design is correctly categorized as a structured observation.
Structured observation involves making systematic observations of a small number of specific behaviors rather than recording all behaviors in a setting globally.
A researcher interested in prosocial behavior decides to use structured observation instead of naturalistic observation. Which of the following research plans best demonstrates this choice?
When a scientist evaluates that the need for systematic data collection on a limited set of variables in a controlled setting outweighs the need for a broad, global narrative of all behaviors, they would select _____ observation as their primary research method.
An educational psychologist is studying classroom off-task behavior. Instead of observing in an unpredictable, natural school setting, she brings groups of students into a simulated classroom laboratory, gives them a specific difficult math task, and records only the frequency of three pre-defined target actions. By utilizing a controlled environment and focusing strictly on a narrow set of specific behaviors of interest, the researcher is employing the research method of ________ observation.
An investigator is planning a series of observational studies on peer cooperation in middle-school children. Analyze the methodology of each proposed study design to match it with its corresponding structural classification and analytical tradeoff.
An investigator is planning a study on social cooperation in children and wants to select a design that best fits the methodological criteria of a 'structured observation'.
Evaluate and arrange the following research designs in order of their methodological alignment with a structured observation, from most aligned (Order 1) to least aligned (Order 4).
Which observational research method involves making careful, systematic observations of a small number of specific behaviors within a more controlled setting, rather than recording all behaviors globally?
In structured observation, researchers must record every single behavior that occurs in the setting to ensure that no details are missed.
Dr. Kim is conducting a study on how preschool children resolve conflicts. She brings pairs of children into a university playroom equipped with a single, highly desirable toy and a one-way mirror. She trains her research assistants to record only two specific actions: physical grabbing of the toy and verbal requests for the toy, using a pre-defined checklist over a 15-minute session.
Match each element of Dr. Kim's research design to its correct function or characteristic within a structured observation.
A developmental psychologist is designing a structured observation study to analyze how parent-child interactions change under mild stress. Arrange the following methodological steps in the correct chronological order, starting from the initial conceptualization of variables and ending with the collection of systemized data.
A developmental psychologist is evaluating two different research designs to study sibling conflict:
- Design A: The researcher observes siblings playing in their family homes for several hours, coding conflict behaviors as they occur naturally.
- Design B: The researcher brings siblings into a laboratory playroom, introduces a standardized game designed to trigger mild competition, and codes three specific behaviors during a controlled 10-minute session.
In evaluating these options, the psychologist chooses Design B (a structured observation) because it allows them to efficiently elicit and systematically code low-frequency competitive behaviors under identical, controlled conditions. However, when critiquing this choice, the researcher must recognize that a major methodological trade-off of this artificial, structured setting is a reduction in ____ validity compared to the naturalistic approach.
Which of the following best describes the setting typically used in structured observation?
In structured observation, researchers make specific design choices to systematically measure behavior. Match each characteristic of a structured observation study with its primary methodological purpose.
A researcher studying conflict-resolution styles in toddlers invites parent-child dyads into a laboratory playroom, asks them to complete a standardized block-building task, and codes the frequency of three specific behaviors: grabbing, crying, and verbal negotiation. True or False: This research design is an application of structured observation.
A researcher is planning several observational studies to investigate helping behavior. Analyze the following study designs and arrange them in order from the lowest degree of researcher control over the environment and behavior (most naturalistic/broad) to the highest degree of researcher control over the environment and behavior (most structured/narrow).
A developmental psychologist is evaluating a proposed structured observation study designed to measure parent-child attachment patterns in a laboratory setting. In this study, parent-child dyads are brought into a playroom, given a standardized set of toys, and instructed to play together while a researcher sits in the corner of the room actively taking notes.
In critiquing this design, the psychologist notes that having a visible observer in the room is a significant methodological weakness because parents are highly likely to alter their natural parenting behaviors to appear more patient or supportive. To evaluate and correct this threat to the study's validity, the psychologist recommends hiding the observer behind a one-way mirror. The specific threat to validity being evaluated here, where participants change their natural behavior because they are aware of being observed, is known as ____.
Attachment Theory
Key Research Questions in Attachment
Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation Procedure
Analyzing Infant-Caregiver Interaction
Bowlby's vs. Ainsworth's View on Attachment
Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation Procedure
Learn After
Attachment Styles Identified in the Strange Situation
Influence of Child Temperament on Attachment Styles
Cultural Variations in Attachment Styles
A researcher is using a well-established procedure to study the bond between 1-year-old infants and their primary caregivers. The procedure involves observing the infant's behavior through a sequence of separations and reunions in an unfamiliar playroom. For determining the nature of the infant-caregiver bond, which part of the observation provides the most significant information?
A researcher is using a well-established procedure to study the bond between 1-year-old infants and their primary caregivers. The procedure involves observing the infant's behavior through a sequence of separations and reunions in an unfamiliar playroom. For determining the nature of the infant-caregiver bond, which part of the observation provides the most significant information?