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The Monkey and His Mother

2023-06-21 04:24:43

Monkey and his mother, my mother always have suspicions of jealousy. Whenever I met a homeless beggar on the subway, whenever I opened my eyes, she focused closely on lost paper and chewing gum medals - blackening the city ash - decorating the floor. She and my father often say beggars to our neighbors (walking down the street near my house, wearing a dark suit), a homeless man who begs for our neighbors I will. Face-free expression on other scenes covered with skin sputum.

In 1950, an American psychologist Harry Harlow conducted an experiment separating monkeys from their mothers in a few hours after birth. Each monkey is isolated in the cage and is given two fake mothers. One mother was made of wire and had a milk bottle; the other mother was covered with synthetic fur and designed to look like a real monkey, but it was a little I did not give food either. Young monkeys gained all the nutrients they needed, but they showed higher anxiety and aggression during maturity. The obvious conclusion is that most organisms have direct physiological needs, whether fixed or protected, but there is still a large emotional element that needs to be nourished

In one version of his experiment, the newly born rhesus monkey was cut off from the mother that it was born and another mother brought up by another mother. I placed young monkeys in a cage and bred the mothers of two monkeys. One of the wire monkeys has a bottle, and the baby monkey can then get nutrition, and the other wire monkey is covered with soft terry cloth. Researchers Rudolph Schaffer and Peggy Emerson analyzed the number of attachment relationships the infants developed in a longitudinal study of 60 infants. The baby is observed every 4 weeks in 1 year after birth and is observed again in 18 months thereafter. According to their observations, Schaffer and Emerson outlined four different attachment stages.

How does Harlow lay the science of his love? He pulled away the baby from his mother in a few hours after birth, then arranged that young man to "grow" with the two surrogate mothers. Both of them had the ability to distribute milk. Mothers are made of strands. The other one is a wire mother covered with soft terry cloth. The first observation by Harlow was that monkeys who chose their mothers spent more time to cling to the Terry Crossing Agent, even though their mother's nutrition came from a bottle worn by a naked mother did. This indicates that baby love is not a simple response to physiological needs. Attachment is not primarily hunger or thirst. It can not be simplified with caution