Publication | Closed Access
Understanding the Impact of Thin Media Models on Women's Body-Focused Affect: The Roles of Thin-Ideal Internalization and Weight-Related Self-Discrepancy Activation in Experimental Exposure Effects
146
Citations
50
References
2009
Year
Affective VariableSocial PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceSocial InfluenceCommunicationSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyInterpersonal AttractionEmotion RegulationGender StudiesNegative AffectThin Beauty IdealBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyExperimental Exposure EffectsThin-ideal InternalizationSocial StressPsychosocial ResearchBody ImageArtsEmotionThin Media ModelsWomen's Health
Previous experimental research demonstrates that exposure to ultra-thin media models has negative effects on many women's body image, but neglects underlying psychological processes. We develop and test a moderated mediation model with internalization of the thin beauty ideal as moderator, and activation of weight-related self-discrepancies as mediating mechanism through which exposure leads to heightened body-focused negative affect. We demonstrate that thin-internalizers' higher negative affect after exposure to advertisements featuring thin models is fully mediated by weight-related self-discrepancy activation (N = 87; Study 1). These findings replicate in a larger sample of women (N = 155; Study 2) and hold regardless of whether or not thin models' body size was emphasized during exposure. Implications for interventions are discussed.
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