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This book is intended to bring together the contributions of many
years of investigations from a number of laboratories involved in
the systematic investigation of mother-offspring interactions and
the attendant conse quences for development. A similar book
(Rheingold, 1963) is now more than a decade old. The value of such
a book is attested to by the burgeoning interest in the subject
matter since the publication of that earlier volume. The importance
of the mother-infant dyad has been recognized by scientests and
parents alike since time immemorial. Pioneering writers such as
Sigmund Freud, with his emphasis upon the expression of biological
"needs" by the developing infant, and John B. Watson, with his
emphasis upon the mother's role as a conditioner-trainer of her
offspring, have been followed (in time, not emphases) by such
investigators as Konrad Lorenz, with his now classic studies of
imprinting, Jean Piaget's sequential analyses of the development of
intellect, and Harry Harlow's ingenious studies of attach ment. The
present volume reflects the influences of these earlier
investigators. It is comparative, psychobiological, and represents
a blend ofthe "experimental" approach characteristic of those
trained in experimental psychology and the "natural history"
approach more often represented in the work of ethologists.
Sequential analyses of developmental changes in the
mother-offspring relationship characterize virtually all of the
work reported herein."
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