| Literature DB >> 26973909 |
Stuart W Flint1, Joanne Hudson2, David Lavallee3.
Abstract
This study examined the effect of anti-fat attitude counter-conditioning using positive images of obese individuals participants completed implicit and explicit measures of attitudes towards fatness on three occasions: no intervention; following exposure to positive images of obese members of the general public; and to images of obese celebrities. Contrary to expectations, positive images of obese individuals did not result in more positive attitudes towards fatness as expected and, in some cases, indices of these attitudes worsened. Results suggest that attitudes towards obesity and fatness may be somewhat robust and resistant to change, possibly suggesting a central and not peripheral processing route for their formation.Entities:
Keywords: attitude strength; counter-conditioning; obesity
Year: 2013 PMID: 26973909 PMCID: PMC4768583 DOI: 10.4081/hpr.2013.e24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Psychol Res ISSN: 2420-8124
Means, standard deviation in parentheses and F statistics for explicit and implicit attitudes in relation to baseline, celebrity and general public conditions.
| Measure | Baseline | Celebrity | General public | F (d.f., error d.f) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATOP | 60.93 | 59.11 | 59.32 | 0.41 |
| BAOP | 12.11 | 12.64 | 12.75 | 0.14 |
| AFAS | 17.45 | 17.93 | 17.71 | 1.20 |
| F-Scale | 4.03 | 3.98 | 3.99 | 0.52 |
| Q1 | 7.54 | 8.07 | 7.75 | 4.69 |
| Q2 | 6.50 | 6.64 | 7.11 | 2.1 |
| IAT D score | 690 | 820 | 770 | 0.36 |
ATOP, Attitudes About Obese Persons Scale; BAOP, Beliefs About Obese Persons Scale; AFAS, Anti-Fat Attitudes Scale; F-Scale, The Fat Phobia Scale short form; IAT: Implicit Attitudes Test modified to assess attitudes towards fatness and thinness; Q1, How insulting do you believe the word fat is?; Q2, How insulting do you believe the word obese is?