Abstract
This paper focuses on caregiver sensitivity, its relation to mind-mindedness (caregivers’ attunement to their infants’ internal states), and how well both constructs predict infant attachment security. The seminal Baltimore research on sensitivity and its relation to attachment security is summarized, highlighting the conclusion that mothers in the insecure-resistant and insecure-avoidant categories could not be distinguished on the basis of sensitivity. The contrast between the complex, sophisticated construct detailed in the original studies and the broad-based nature of the sensitivity coding scale is discussed. This paper argues that we should return to Ainsworth, Bell, and Stayton’s (1971, 1974) original emphasis on the caregiver’s ability to perceive things from the child’s point of view in defining a measure of the quality of early infant–caregiver interaction. This approach led to the development of the construct of mind-mindedness. There are two mind-mindedness indices: caregivers’ tendency during infant–caregiver interaction to (a) comment appropriately on their infants’ putative thoughts and feelings (appropriate mind-related comments), and (b) misread their infants’ internal states (non-attuned mind-related comments). Both indices predict independent variance in infant–caregiver attachment security, and together can distinguish between the secure, avoidant, and resistant categories. The specific, multidimensional nature of mind-mindedness complements the global construct of sensitivity.
Acknowledgements
I am very grateful to Inge Bretherton for her generosity in sharing her first hand experience of Ainsworth’s original research, and to the editors for giving me the honor of contributing to this special issue.
Funding
The research discussed in this paper was supported by Staffordshire University and the Economic and Social Research Council [R000239456].