Based on her research, she identified three major styles of attachment that children have to their parents or caregivers. In a 2002 review ranking the most eminent psychologists of the twentieth century, Ainsworth was listed as the 97th most influential psychologist, based on the frequency of journal citation, introductory psychology textbook citation, and survey response.

Early Life

Mary Ainsworth was born in Glendale, Ohio. When she was 15, she read William McDougall’s book Character and the Conduct of Life, which inspired her lifelong interest in psychology. Death: March 21, 1999 Best Known For: Research on attachment theory and the development of the “Strange Situation” assessment.

She attended the University of Toronto in the honors psychology program. After earning her BA in 1935, her MA in 1936, and her PhD in 1939, she spent several years teaching at the University of Toronto before joining the Canadian Women’s Army Corp in 1942.

The Strange Situation Assessment

In 1950, she married Leonard Ainsworth and moved to London. During her time in England, Ainsworth worked at the Tavistock Clinic with psychologist John Bowlby, where she researched maternal-infant attachments. After leaving this position, she spent time researching mother-child interactions in Uganda. After returning to the U.S., Ainsworth took a position at John Hopkins University. She divorced in 1960 and underwent therapy that contributed to her interest in psychoanalytic theory. While teaching at John Hopkins, she began working on creating an assessment to measure attachments between mothers and children. It was here that she developed her famous “Strange Situation” assessment, in which a researcher observes a child’s reactions when a mother briefly leaves her child alone in an unfamiliar room. In her study, children between the ages of 12 and 18 months were briefly left alone in a room while the researchers observed their reactions. They were observed when the parent and child were together, when a stranger entered the room, when the parent briefly left the room, and when the parent returned.

Attachment Theory

Based on her observations and research, Ainsworth concluded that there were three main styles of attachment:

Secure attachment: Securely attached children seek comfort when frightened and prefer parents to strangers.Anxious-avoidant attachment: Anxiously attached children are wary of strangers, exhibit great distress when a parent leaves, but are not comforted by a parent’s return.Anxious-resistant attachment: Avoidantly attached children show little preference for parents over strangers and seek little comfort from their caregivers.

Since these initial findings, her work has spawned countless studies into the nature of attachment and the different attachment styles between children and caregivers. In her letters to her mentor and fellow attachment researcher John Bowlby, Ainsworth noted that she also believed different sub-types might exist within the three primary attachment styles. She also suggested that there might be other attachment styles she had not observed in her research and believed that cross-cultural variations might exist.

Major Contributions to Psychology

Mary Ainsworth’s research on attachment has played an important role in our understanding of child development. In addition to Ainsworth’s three styles, other researchers identified a fourth style known as disorganized-insecure attachment.  While these styles change with time and experience, researchers believe that childhood attachment styles influence adult romantic attachments. Adults with a secure romantic attachment style tend to have lasting relationships and believe love is enduring. Those with an insecure romantic attachment style believe that love is more temporary. While her work is not without controversies, such as the extent to which early attachment styles contribute to later behavior, her observations have inspired an enormous body of research on early childhood attachment.

A Word From Verywell

Mary Ainsworth was a significant figure in the field of developmental psychology. Her research and development of the Strange Situation Assessment helped psychologists further explore the importance of early childhood attachments in child development. Her work also inspired further exploration of how early relationships continue to shape interpersonal attachments throughout life. Ainsworth’s most famous study is the “strange situation” experiment. In this experiment, she observed how infants and toddlers responded when their mothers left them alone with a stranger. This study helped identify the different attachment types between children and their caregivers. It also showed the importance of early relationships for the child’s development.