Just curious....
Am I the only TIPs member who finds it rather silly to conduct a
study that on attachment that:
(1) relies exclusively on participants diagnosed with one of the most
poorly validated diagnoses in the DSM (reactive attachment disorder, for
which the validity evidence is very poor);
(2) attempts to measure changes in attachment among a group of children
with severe and lasting attachment deficits, who presumably would be
among the very children most resistant to short-term changes in attachment;
(3) anticipates statistically (and presumably clinically) significant
changes in measured attachment behavior in children with severe and
lasting attachment deficits as a consequence of a single videotaped
presentation;
(4) relies exclusively on an independent variable that almost surely
exerts markedly multiple effects within and across participants (e.g.,
empathy, disgust, curiosity, fascination), rendering negative (and
perhaps even positive) findngs difficult to interpret;
(5) relies on an independent variable that features both (a) the
birthing process itself and (b) modeling of parenting behavior with
children, rendering any positive findings difficult to interpret;
(6) relies on an independent variable that confounds two influences: (a)
the direct exposure of participants to cute animals with (b) the direct
witnessing of the birthing process in such animals, making it impossible
to determine whether any positive findings might be due to (a), (b), or
their interaction; and (7) relies solely on the birth of an animal
rather than a human as an independent variable yet uses dependent
measures that assess attachment to relationships with other children, so
that negative findings could readily be due to an absence of
generalization in attachment feelings across species?
If so, I guess I'll just have to play the role of TIPS Grinch
today......
....Scott
Beth Benoit wrote:
I sent that info to a very bright student of mine who, with her
husband, runs a farm with sheep and goats. I agree with her, and
didn't find the paper to be ridiculous or astonishing at all. Below
is an excerpt from her reply:
Beth Benoit
Granite State College
Portsmouth NH
Do I take it that Scott Lilienfeld doubts the efficacy of the
experiment? Two years ago my neighbor brought her steadfastly
unattached
21-year-old daughter to the farm to see the babies. They witnessed twin
kids being born. The daughter promptly proposed to her boyfriend and
had a
baby. She says that seeing the birth and the mother goat's behavior
radically changed her feelings. Anecdotal but interesting. I'm a firm
believer in animal behavior informing our own (for better and worse).
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Scott O. Lilienfeld, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology, Room 206
Emory University
532 N. Kilgo Circle
Atlanta, Georgia 30322
(404) 727-1125 (phone)
(404) 727-0372 (FAX)
Home Page: http://www.emory.edu/PSYCH/Faculty/lilienfeld.html
The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice:
www.srmhp.org
The Master in the Art of Living makes little distinction between his work and
his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his education and
his recreation, his love and his intellectual passions. He hardly knows which
is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence in whatever he does,
leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him – he is
always doing both.
- Zen Buddhist text
(slightly modified)
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