Literature DB >> 18606732

Drive for thinness and attention toward specific body parts in a nonclinical sample.

Johannes Hewig1, Spring Cooper, Ralf H Trippe, Holger Hecht, Thomas Straube, Wolfgang H R Miltner.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the differences between participants scoring high versus low on a drive for thinness construct concerning their visual attention toward specific body parts. We hypothesized that participants scoring high on the drive for thinness subscale would show increased attention to body regions, which are important in the assessment of body weight and thinness like the waist, hips, legs, and arms.
METHOD: We examined eye-gaze behavior of a nonclinical sample of 51 male and female college students with an eye-tracking system as they were looking at pictures of young, attractive males and females. In addition, we used the Eating Disorder Inventory to measure drive for thinness.
RESULTS: Participants with increased scores on the drive for thinness subscale looked longer and more often to the waist, hips, legs, and arms as compared with low scorers. In addition, they showed decreased attention toward the head or face.
CONCLUSION: The results indicate that participants scoring high on drive for thinness show an attentional bias toward body regions that are associated with assessing changes in weight. However, they neglected the face, which is the most important source of social and affective information when looking at others.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18606732     DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31817e41d3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychosom Med        ISSN: 0033-3174            Impact factor:   4.312


  9 in total

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4.  Where Do You Look? Visual Attention to Human Bodies across the Weight Spectrum in Individuals with Normal Weight or with Obesity.

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6.  Analysis of Attentional Bias towards Attractive and Unattractive Body Regions among Overweight Males and Females: An Eye-Movement Study.

Authors:  Petra Warschburger; Claudia Calvano; Eike M Richter; Ralf Engbert
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8.  Fixation patterns, not clinical diagnosis, predict body size over-estimation in eating disordered women and healthy controls.

Authors:  Katri K Cornelissen; Piers L Cornelissen; Peter J B Hancock; Martin J Tovée
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9.  Faced with one's fear: Attentional bias in anorexia nervosa and healthy individuals upon confrontation with an obese body stimulus in an eye-tracking paradigm.

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  9 in total

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