| Literature DB >> 25685353 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Repeated exposure to thin beauty ideals is part of the daily routine. Exposure to thin ideals via mass media plays an important role in the development and maintenance of eating disorders (EDs), low self-esteem, depressive or anxious feelings in young females. It is important to elucidate the circumstances under which exposure to thin ideals develops its detrimental impact and to investigate whether these features are more pronounced in EDs than in other mental disorders also related to negative body image. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Body image; Cognitive distortion; Eating behavior; Emotion regulation
Year: 2014 PMID: 25685353 PMCID: PMC4317137 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-014-0037-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Figure 1Maintenance of eating disorder.
Figure 2Study sample.
Instruments
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| Structured interview to assess psychiatric disorders according DSM-IV-TR, according to DSM-5 in prep. by S. Schneider et al. | Diagnostic phase |
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| Structured interview to assess psychiatric disorders according DSM-IV | Diagnostic phase |
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| 21 items; measures severity of depressive symptoms | Baseline |
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| 21 items; measures severity of anxiety | Baseline |
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| 6 items; measures the basic mood-dimensions valence, calmness, and energetic arousal scale | During the experiment |
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| 53 items; covers all somatic symptoms mentioned as occurring in somatization disorder, according to DSM-IV and ICD-10 | Baseline |
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| 4 items, measures the preoccupation with an imagined or slight defect in appearance, which is not better accounted for by another mental disorder | Baseline |
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| 10 items; measures a general state self-esteem | Baseline |
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| 10 items (subscale emotional eating), measures eating in response to emotional states | Baseline |
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| 28 items; 4 scales: eating concerns, weight concerns, restraint eating, shape concerns; assessment of relevant characteristics of eating disorders that have occurred during the past 28 days | Baseline |
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| 7 items; assessment of eating behavior (desire to binge, to purge and to restrict) | During the experiment |
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| 9 figures of increasing body size (very thin to very obese), to assess body image satisfaction by calculating diff. between current image and ideal image | During the experiment |
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| 16 items; 3 subscales: internalization of the media body ideal, perceived pressure from the media and awareness of the body ideal | Baseline |
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| 18 items; 2 subsections: 14 items trait TSF, 4 items clinically relevant food-related thoughts; 3 components likelihood, feeling and moral | Baseline |
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| 30 items; 3 components likelihood, feeling and moral, assessment of thin ideal related cognitions | Baseline |
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| 10 items; questionnaire to assess aspects of thought-shape fusion, e.g. feelings of anxiety and guilt | During the experiment |
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| 11 items; assessment of satisfaction with the appearance and body-related emotions | During the experiment |
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| 20-item, including two factors: Self-Evaluative Salience and Motivational Salience | Baseline |
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| Short version with 12 items: body image satisfaction, dieting attitudes/behaviors, preoccupation with thinness | Baseline |
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| 36 items; 6 dimensions intended to characterize central aspects of affective experience and emotion processing | Baseline |
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| 15 items, assessment of impulsivity, 3 subscales (non-planning impulsivity, motoric impulsivity, attention-based impulsivity) | Baseline |
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| 7 items, measures different emotional regulation strategies during the experiment | During the experiment |
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| Individual’s tendency to compare their own appearance to the appearance of others in social situations | Baseline & during Experiment |
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| 4 items; 2 scales: 2 Items perceived effect of pictures on self, 2 items perceived effect of picture on other women (third person) | During the experiment |
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| 13 items, measures the effects of pictures in a media exposure during an experiment 24 h later | After the experiment |
Figure 3Times schedule.
Figure 4Decode_EMO.
Figure 5Experimental procedure.