Harlow's Rhesus Monkeys, Love Experiments
VeryWellMind.com |
The famous experiments that psychologist Harry Harlow conducted in the 1950's on maternal deprivation in rhesus monkeys were landmarks not only in primatology, but in the evolving science of attachment and loss. Harlow himself repeatedly compared his experimental subjects to children and press reports universally treated his findings as major statements about love and development in human beings. These monkey love experiments had powerful implications for any and all separations of mothers and infants, including adoption, as well as child-rearing in general.
In his University of Wisconsin laboratory, Harlow probed the
nature of love, aiming to illuminate its first causes and mechanisms in the
relationships formed between infants and mothers. First, he showed that mother
love was emotional rather than physiological, substantiating the
adoption-friendly theory that continuity of care—“nurture”—was a far more
determining factor in healthy psychological development than “nature.” Second,
he showed that capacity for attachment was closely associated with critical
periods in early life, after which it was difficult or impossible to compensate
for the loss of initial emotional security. The critical period thesis
confirmed the wisdom of placing infants with adoptive parents as shortly after
birth as possible. Harlow’s work provided experimental evidence for
prioritizing psychological over biological parenthood while underlining the
developmental risks of adopting children beyond infancy. It normalized and
pathologized adoption at the same time.
How did Harlow go about constructing his science of love? He
separated infant monkeys from their mothers a few hours after birth, then
arranged for the young animals to be “raised” by two kinds of surrogate monkey
mother machines, both equipped to dispense milk. One mother was made out of
bare wire mesh. The other was a wire mother covered with soft terry cloth.
Harlow’s first observation was that monkeys who had a choice of mothers spent
far more time clinging to the terry cloth surrogates, even when their physical
nourishment came from bottles mounted on the bare wire mothers. This suggested
that infant love was no simple response to the satisfaction of physiological
needs. Attachment was not primarily about hunger or thirst. It could not be
reduced to nursing.
Then Harlow modified his experiment and made a second
important observation. When he separated the infants into two groups and gave
them no choice between the two types of mothers, all the monkeys drank equal
amounts and grew physically at the same rate. But the similarities ended there.
Monkeys who had soft, tactile contact with their terry cloth mothers behaved
quite differently than monkeys whose mothers were made out of cold, hard wire.
Harlow hypothesized that members of the first group benefited from a
psychological resource—emotional attachment—unavailable to members of the
second. By providing reassurance and security to infants, cuddling kept normal
development on track.
What exactly did Harlow see that convinced him emotional
attachment made a decisive developmental difference? When the experimental
subjects were frightened by strange, loud objects, such as teddy bears beating
drums, monkeys raised by terry cloth surrogates made bodily contact with their
mothers, rubbed against them, and eventually calmed down. Harlow theorized that
they used their mothers as a “psychological base of operations,” allowing them
to remain playful and inquisitive after the initial fright had subsided. In
contrast, monkeys raised by wire mesh surrogates did not retreat to their
mothers when scared. Instead, they threw themselves on the floor, clutched
themselves, rocked back and forth, and screamed in terror. These activities
closely resembled the behaviors of autistic and deprived children frequently
observed in institutions as well as the pathological behavior of adults
confined to mental institutions, Harlow noted. The awesome power of attachment
and loss over mental health and illness could hardly have been performed more
dramatically.
In subsequent experiments, Harlow’s monkeys proved that
“better late than never” was not a slogan applicable to attachment. When Harlow
placed his subjects in total isolation for the first eights months of life,
denying them contact with other infants or with either type of surrogate
mother, they were permanently damaged. Harlow and his colleagues repeated these
experiments, subjecting infant monkeys to varied periods of motherlessness.
They concluded that the impact of early maternal deprivation could be reversed
in monkeys only if it had lasted less than 90 days, and estimated that the
equivalent for humans was six months. After these critical periods, no amount
of exposure to mothers or peers could alter the monkeys’ abnormal behaviors and
make up for the emotional damage that had already occurred. When emotional
bonds were first established was the key to whether they could be established
at all.
For experimentalists like Harlow, only developmental
theories verified under controlled laboratory conditions deserved to be called
scientific. Harlow was no Freudian. He criticized psychoanalysis for
speculating on the basis of faulty memories, assuming that adult disorders
necessarily originated in childhood experiences, and interpreting too literally
the significance of breast-feeding. Yet Harlow’s data confirmed the well known
psychoanalytic emphasis on the mother-child relationship at the dawn of life,
and his research reflected the repudiation of eugenics and the triumph of
therapeutic approaches already well underway throughout the human sciences and
clinical professions by mid-century.
Along with child analysts and researchers, including Anna
Freud and RenĂ© Spitz, Harry Harlow’s experiments added scientific legitimacy to
two powerful arguments: against institutional child care and in favor of
psychological parenthood. Both suggested that the permanence associated with
adoption was far superior to other arrangements when it came to safeguarding
the future mental and emotional well-being of children in need of parents.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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