Tossup

A team led by Michael Rutter found that disorders of this phenomenon were rare in Romanian-English orphans born during the Ceauşescu (“cho-SHESS-koo”) regime. Harry Harlow studied this phenomenon in rhesus macaques by constructing cloth-and-wire “surrogates,” (10[1])which inspired John Bowlby’s theory of this phenomenon. (10[1])In an (-5[1])experiment studying this phenomenon, (10[1])a stranger talked to a parent (10[1])before the parent left the stranger with their child. Mary Ainsworth’s “strange situation” experiment studied this phenomenon, whose three “styles” are “secure,” “anxious-ambivalent,” (10[1]-5[1])and “anxious-avoidant.” (10[1])For 10 points, (10[1])name this feeling that an infant feels toward a caregiver. ■END■ (10[1])

ANSWER: attachment [accept attachment theory; accept attachment styles; accept secure attachment, anxious-avoidant attachment, or anxious-ambivalent attachment; prompt on affection; prompt on familial bonds]
<Warwick A, Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position

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