5. Developing Trauma in a Baby
The Little Albert experiment, conducted by John Hopkins University professor John Watson and his student Rosalie Rayner, intended to prove two theories: (1) that fear itself was innate, rather than conditioned, and (2) that a child could be conditioned to fear particular things. The subject of the experiment was Douglas Merritte, whom a 2010 study revealed was the baby of wetnurse Arvilla Merritte. In the Little Albert experiment, the 9-month-old was first exposed to various animals (a rabbit, a rat, a dog, a monkey) and objects (masks, cotton, wool, and burning newspapers, among others), and Little Albert displayed no fear of the stimuli. Then, a loud clanging sound (the innately feared stimulus) was introduced the next time the baby touched the rat, causing the child to cry. Later, when only the rat was presented without the sound, Little Albert cried and tried to move away from the animal, thus seeming to prove that he had been conditioned to fear the rat. For obvious reasons, the experiment is today considered ethically unacceptable.
Discussion about this post