The NICHD study of childcare discussed in Deborah Blum,
Sex on the Brain: The Biological Differences Between Men and Women
(New York: Viking, 1997). One of the best perspectives on day care is Ellen Ruppel Shell,
A Child's Place: A Year in the Life of a Daycare Center
(Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1992).
Suomi's work on mothering styles is found in Jude Cassidy and Phillip R. Shaver, eds., “Attachment in Rhesus Monkeys,”
Handbook of Attachment
(New York: The Guildford Press, 1999).
Leonard Rosenblum's look at “aunted” monkeys is cited in L. T. Nash and R. L. Wheeler, “Mother-Infant Relationships in Non-Human Primates,” in Hiram E. Fitzgerald, John A. Mullins, and Patricia Gage, eds.,
Child Nurturance,
vol. 3 (New York, Plenum Press, 1982). He is co-editor with Michael Lewis of two books that further explore such relationships: Michael Lewis and Leonard A. Rosenblum, eds.,
The Effect of the Infant on Its Caregiver
(New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974); and
The Child and Its Family
(New York: Plenum Press, 1979).
The behavior of titi monkeys appears in Sally P. Mendoza and William A. Mason, “Parental Division of Labor and Differentiation of Attachments in a Monogamous Primate,”
Animal Behavior,
vol. 34 (1986).
Cotton top tamarin society is discussed in Charles T. Snowdon, “Infant Care in Cooperatively Breeding Species,”
Advances in the Study of Behavior,
vol. 25, 1996; and Gretchen G. Achenbach and Charles T. Snowdon, “Response to Sibling Birth in Juvenile Cotton Top Tamarins,”
Behaviour,
vol. 135, no. 7 (1998).
Myron A. Hofer, “Infant Separation Responses and the Maternal Role,”
Biological Psychiatry,
vol. 10, no. 2 (1975).
Saul M. Schanberg and Tiffany M. Field, “Sensory Deprivation Stress and Supplemental Stimulation in the Rat Pup and Preterm Human,”
Child Development,
vol. 58 (1987); S. M. Schanberg, “Medicine: Different Strokes,”
Scientific American
(September 1989): 34; “Touch: A Biological Regulator of Growth and Development in the Neonate,”
Verhaltenstherapie,
vol. 3, Suppl. 15 (1993); Daniel Goleman, “The Experience of Touch: Research Points to a Critical Role,”
New York Times,
2 February 1988.
Sapolsky's discussion of rat stress experiments is found in
Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers
(W. H. Freeman and Co., 1994). The studies with Michael Meaney are also discussed in that book. Further information on Meaney's research comes from his presentation at the February 2001 meeting of the American Association for Advancement of Science in San Francisco and
from discussion with another of his research colleagues, Paul Plotsky, at Emory University in Atlanta.
Martin H. Teicher, “Scars That Won't Heal: The Neurobiology of Child Abuse,”
Scientific American,
vol. 286, no. 3 (March 2002).
Bruce Perry quoted in Deborah Blum, “Attention Deficit,”
Mother Jones
(January/February 1999). Information on face-reading skills from Deborah Blum, “Let's Face It,”
Psychology Today,
vol. 31, no. 5 (September/October 1998).
Harry's comment about love and modesty in a letter to William Verplanck, housed at the Archives of the History of American Psychology in Akron.
Epilogue: Extreme Love
Harry Harlow's discussion of the aspects of love and the importance of primate research in answering questions of child abuse in “Behavioral Giant Not âGoing to Seed,'”
The Capital Times,
Madison, Wisconsin, August 3, 1978.
The proposed NIH experiment on isolating children is described in a textbook: Harry F. Harlow, James L. McGaugh, and Richard F. Thompson, eds.,
Psychology
(San Francisco: Albion Publishing Company, 1971).
Thomas Lewis, Fari Amini, and Richard Lannon,
A General Theory of Love
(New York: Random House, 2000).
Sapolsky quotes on animal research from his
Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers
(W. H. Freeman and Co., 1994).
Harlow comments on his perspective on monkeys from Robert Bonin, “Harry Harlow Has Spent a Lifetime Studying MonkeysâWhich Doesn't Mean He Likes Them,”
Milwaukee Journal,
October 28, 1973.
Mason's comment from Deborah Blum,
The Monkey Wars
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1994).
Martin Stephens's survey of isolation experiments is called “Maternal Deprivation Experiments in Psychology.” It was published in 1986 for the American Anti-Vivisection Society and the New England Anti-Vivisection Society.
The descriptions of other animal research and the brief history of the animal rights movement, including comments from Christine Stevens, a discussion of the Silver Spring monkeys, and the letter to Gig Levine, come from Blum,
The Monkey Wars.
Gluck's comment is from an interview for this book.
Index
Abstract intelligence
Abusive parents
Academic bandits
Adolescence
Adventist
Affection
Africa
Ainsworth, Mary Salter
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Albutt, Arthur
Allegheny College
Allport, Gordon
Alpha male monkeys
Ambivalent attachment
American Humane Society
American Medical Association
American Pediatric Society
American Psychological Association (APA)
Amini, Fari
Anaclitic depression
Anamosa, Iowa
Animal Intelligence
(Thorndike)
Animal Welfare institute (AWI)
Animals
Antianxiety drugs
Antidepressants
Anti-Semitism
Approach-avoidance play
Arsenian, Jean
Asher Center for Study and Treatment of Depressive Disorders
Asian monkeys
Associated Press
Asylums
Atlantic Monthly, The
Attachment theory
Aunt Harriet
Aunt Nell
Austria
Autism
Avoidant attachment
Babies.
See
Infants
Baboon
Baby-tender
Bacteria, streptococcus
Bakwin, Harry
Baptist
Barbary macaques
Bartlett, Neil
Bascom Hall
Bayley, Nancy
Baylor University
BBC
Beach, Frank
Becoming Attached
(Karen)
Behaviorism
Behaviorist Manifesto
Bekoff, Marc
Bellevue Hospital
Bender, Loretta
Berg, J.H. Van Den
Berkson, Gershon
Bernreuter, Robert
Bernstein, Irwin
Bernstein, Stephen
Bettelheim, Bruno
Bicycle reflectors
Big Dipper
Binet, Alfred
Birney, Alice
Black box
Blake, William
Blatz, William
Blazek, Nancy
Blitzkrieg
Bonin, Robert
Bonnet macaques
Bowlby, Edward John Mostyn
feminist movement and
Harry Harlow and
as a white-collar scientist
Bowlby-Spitz-Robertson-Harlow kind of experience
Bowman, Jim
Brain
Brenneman, William
Brescia, Italy
Brimstone
British Psychiatric Association
British Psychoanalytic Society
Brogden, Wulf
Brown University
Browning, Robert
Buffalo, New York
Butler box
Butler, Robert
California
California Regional Primate Research Center
Cambridge University
Capuchin
Capuchin monkeys
Care and Feeding of Children, The
(Holt)
Carmel Valley, California
Catholic
Cat-in-the-box
CBS
Central Park
Champaign, Illinois
Chapin, Henry
Chemotherapy
Chicago, Illinois
Chicago's World Fair
Child Care and Training Manuals
Child hatchery
Children
ambivalent attachment of
avoidant attachment of
at foundling homes
hospitalized
insecurely attached
love and
securely attached
troubled
upbringing of
Children's Memorial Hospital
Cholera
Christian Scientist
Cinnamon
Clark, Dennis
Clark University
Client-centered therapy
Cloth mother study
Cognitive development
Cognitive intelligence
Collingswood, Charles
Columbia University
Common sense
Competent Infant, The
(Murphy, Smith, Stone)
Concrete intelligence
Conditioned responses
Coney Island, New York
Conquest
Contact comfort
Contact-comfort-giving mother
Cooney, Martin
Cooper, Leland
Cornell University
Corticosterone
Crab-eating macaques
Daily Cardinal
(newspaper)
Dane County
“Dangers of Too Much Mother Love, The,”
Darwin, Charles
Delayed response trials
Denenberg, Victor
Dependence
Depression
Descartes, Rene
Development timetables
Diphtheria
Dominance
Drive reduction theory
Duke mother-touch studies
Duke University
Dustbowl of empiricism
Dutch Reformed
Earthstone
East Coast Harlow
Efe pygmy infants
Eichorn, Dorothy
Eldon, Iowa
Emory University
Emotions
Empty Fortress, The
(Bettelheim)
England
Episcopal church
Ethologists
Ethologists for Ethical Treatment of Animals (EETA)
Europe
Evolution of Psychology, The
(Notterman)
Eyers, Diane
Fabric of social interaction
Fairfield, Iowa
Families
Farming
“Fed on Cloth Mother,”
“Fed on Wire Mother,”
Feminist movement
Field, Tiffany
Filial affectional system
First Methodist Church
First Wisconsin Bank
Fleming, Alexander
Florence, Italy
Florida
Food wells
Food-equals-love approach
Foundling homes,.
See also
Orphanages
Fox Indians
France
Freud, Anna
Freud, Sigmund
Freud's theories
From Learning to Love
(Harlow)
Ganda, Uganda
Gandhi
Gather, Walter
General Theory of Love, A
(Amini,Lannon,Lewis)
Germany
Gesell, Arnold
Glascock, Jane
Glickman, Christa
Glickman, Steve
Gluck, John
Goddard, Henry
Goldfarb, William
Goldstein, Kurt
Goodall, Jane
Goon Park
Goslings
Grief: A Peril in Infancy
Griffin, Gary
Grindstone
“Gruesome Twosomes, The,”
Hall, G. Stanley
Hansen, Ernst
Harlow, Clara Ernestine Mears
Harlow, Harry Frederick
alcoholism and
anthropology fellowship of
autobiographical history of surrogate mother and
biography of
on biological differences of sexes
as a blue-collar scientist
body heat studies of
breeding of primates and
Calvin Stone and
cat research of
Clara Mears and
clinical depression of
cloth mother study of
daily tooth brushing composition of
effects of isolation study of
as experimental psychologist
feminist movement and
first primate lab of
first undergraduate psychology class of
frog experiments of
in high school
isolation experiments of
John Bowlby and
legacy of
Lewis W. Terman and
lifestyle of
on love and relationships
name change
as National Medal of Science recipient
“Nature of Love” and
NIH Madison primate center and
Parkinson's disease and
Peggy Kuenne and
Ph.D. dissertation of
as president of APA
primate research and
pro-parenting stance of
Psychology Today
interview of
puns and speech defect of
rats and
single-relationship life experiment of
at Stanford University
students of
at University of Wisconsin
vertical chamber apparatus and
views on child and working mother
Walter Miles and
working intelligence experiments
Harlow, Jonathan
Harlow, Margaret Kuenne.
See
Harlow, Peggy