| Literature DB >> 30150946 |
Rotem Kahalon1, Nurit Shnabel1, Julia C Becker2.
Abstract
This paper provides an organizing framework for the experimental research on the effects of state self-objectification on women. We explain why this body of work, which had grown rapidly in the last 20 years, departs from the original formulation of objectification theory (Fredrickson and Roberts, 1997). We compare the different operationalizations of state self-objectification and examine how they map onto its theoretical definition, concluding that the operationalizations have focused mostly on one component of this construct (concerns about one's physical appearance) while neglecting others (adopting a third-person perspective and treating oneself as a dehumanized object). We review the main findings of studies that experimentally induced state self-objectification and examined its affective, motivational, behavioral, cognitive, and physiological outcomes. We note that three core outcomes of this state as specified by objectification theory (safety anxiety, reduced flow experiences, and awareness of internal body states) have hardly been examined so far. Most importantly, we introduce an integrative process model, suggesting that the reported effects are triggered by four different mechanisms: appearance monitoring, experience of discrepancy from appearance standards, stereotype threat, and activation of the "sex object" schema. We propose strategies for distinguishing between these mechanisms and explain the theoretical and practical importance of doing so.Entities:
Keywords: an integrative process model; appearance monitoring; appearance standards; experimental research; objectification theory; schema activation; self-objectification; stereotype threat
Year: 2018 PMID: 30150946 PMCID: PMC6099106 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
The existing experimental research on state self-objectification: a brief roadmap.
| Fredrickson et al., | A two-cell experimental design (an objectifying vs. a non-objectifying condition); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a sweater | ||
| Fredrickson et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) X 2 (gender: women vs. men) X 2 (high vs. low TSO) | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a sweater | ||
| Gapinski et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) X 2 (exposure to “fat talk” vs. control talk, which was also intended to manipulate objectification); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a sweater; exposure to “fat talk” (a confederate saying “This [swimsuit/sweater] looks so horrible on me”) vs. “neutral talk” | ||
| Harrison and Fredrickson, | A 2 (race: White vs. non-White) X 3 (exposure to lean female athletes, non-lean female athletes, and male athletes) TSO was measured as a covariate ER: What is the meaning of the asterisk? | Watching sports media depicting lean female athletes (representing the White female idealized body), non-lean female athletes (representing the non-White idealized female body), or male athletes (a control condition) | TST (used as the primary DV) | |
| Calogero, | A three-cell experimental design (anticipating a male gaze, a female gaze or no gaze) TSO was measured as a covariate | Anticipating an interaction with a man, a woman, or no interaction | ||
| Hebl et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) X 2 (gender: female vs. male) X 4 (race/ethnicity: African American, Caucasian, Asian American or Hispanic) TSO was measured as a covariate | Trying on a swimsuit (one-piece Speedo briefs for men) vs. a sweater | ||
| Roberts and Gettman, | A 3 (self-objectifying prime, body competence prime and control) X 2 (gender: female vs. male) | Answering scrambled sentences test containing objectifying words (e.g., “sexy”), body competence words (e.g., “strong”) or neutral words (e.g., “silly”) | ||
| Fea and Brannon, | A three-cell experimental design (type of compliment: neutral, character-related or appearance-related) | Receiving a character-related compliment (“You sound like a nice person”), appearance-related compliment (“You are a nice-looking person”), or no compliment from a 27-year old female experimenter | TST (used as a DV) | |
| Quinn et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) × 2 (gender: female vs. male) | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a sweater | ||
| Quinn et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a sweater | ||
| Choma et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: objectifying [intervention movie] vs. non-objectifying) TSO was measured as a covariate | Watching a media literacy intervention movie ( | ||
| Johnson et al., | A three-cell experimental design (condition: objectification of men, objectification of women, no objectification) | Watching neutral ads, ads objectifying men, or ads objectifying women | ||
| Martins et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) × 2 (sexual orientation: gay vs. straight) | Trying on Speedo briefs vs. a sweater | ||
| Harper and Tiggemann, | A three-cell experimental design (condition: objectification of women vs. objectification of women and men vs. no-objectification). TSO was measured as a covariate | Exposure to advertisement featuring a thin woman (objectification of women condition), a thin woman with at least one attractive man (objectification of women and men condition), or no people (control condition) | ||
| Tiggemann and Boundy, | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) × 2 (appearance comment: compliment vs. none); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Exposure to a subtle objectifying environment (i.e., scales and full-length mirrors) vs. a standard environment Receiving (vs. not receiving) an appearance compliment from a female experimenter (“I like your top”) | ||
| Aubrey et al., | A three-cell experimental design (condition: objectification through idealized bodies vs. objectification through segmented bodies vs. no objectification); Trait body-surveillance was measured as a potential moderator | Exposure to images of female models with high skin exposure (the objectification through idealized bodies condition), images of women segmented into body parts (the objectification through segmented body parts condition), or images unrelated to appearance of places and things (control condition) | TST (including each statement's valence, used as a DV), body—surveillance | |
| Daniels, | A 2 (condition: high vs. low sexualization) X 2 (targets of sexualization: athletes vs. models) experimental design | Exposure to media images featuring sexualized athletes or models (high objectification conditions), or non-sexualized (i.e., performance) athletes and models (low objectification conditions) | TST (used as the primary DV) | |
| Gay and Castano, | A two-cell experimental design (condition: high vs. low objectification); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Being videotaped from the neck down by either a man or a woman (representing high vs. low objectification conditions) | ||
| Gay and Castano, | A two-cell experimental design (condition: high vs. low objectification); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Being videotaped from the neck down by either a man or a woman | ||
| Saguy et al., | A 2 (gender: male vs. female) × 2 (partner's gender: male vs. female) × 3 (communication condition: body, face, audio) | Participants introduced themselves to a partner (another participant), knowing that s/he will listen to an audiotape of their introduction (in the control condition), watch a videotape of their introduction filmed from their neck up (in the low objectification condition), or from their neck down (in the high objectification condition) | ||
| (Calogero and Pina, | A three-cell experimental design (body objectification, body empowerment, or body neutral) | Answering scrambled sentences test containing objectifying words (e.g., “sexy”), body competence words (e.g., “strong”), or neutral words (e.g., “silly”) | ||
| Gervais et al., | A 2 (gender: male vs. female) × 2 (condition: high vs. low objectification) | In the objectifying condition participants experienced an objectifying gaze from an interviewer (a trained confederate) of the opposite sex and received feedback that implicitly referred to their looks; in the non-objectifying condition the interviewer looked in their eyes during the interview and the feedback did not refer to their looks | ||
| Goldenberg et al., | A 3 (condition: objectifying, competence saliency, and neutral) X 2 (exposure vs. non-exposure to death prime); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Exposure to a cover of a magazine depicting a female model wearing a bikini, a full dressed female soccer player in motion, or a dining table | ||
| Goldenberg et al., | A 2 (appearance compliment vs. no compliment) X 2 (exposure vs. non-exposure to death prime); TSO measured as a potential moderator | Receiving (vs. not receiving) an appearance compliment from a female experimenter (“That's a really cute outfit”) | ||
| Hopper and Aubrey, | A three-cell experimental design (condition: high, low and no objectification); participants' stage in pregnancy, history with pregnancy, and age measured as potential moderators Habitual body surveillance was measured as a covariate | Exposure to images of pregnant celebrities that were highly sexualized (full body images), not sexualized (face only images), or images of baby products with no people featured | TST (used as the primary DV) | |
| Thøgersen-Ntoumani et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: high vs. low objectification); trait self-objectification, appearance evaluation and self-esteem measured as potential moderators | Trying on tight shorts and a sports bra-style top vs. baggy tracksuit trousers and a matching long-sleeved baggy top | ||
| Green et al., | A within-participants experimental design (high vs. low objectification); TSO was measured as a potential moderator | Trying on a swimsuit vs. a tracksuit in a randomized order | ||
| Prichard and Tiggemann, | A 2 (physical exercise vs. no exercise) × 2 (condition: high vs. low objectification); habitual exercising was measured as a potential moderator | Watching appearance-focused vs. neutral music videos while exercising vs. resting | Manipulation check: TSO (a modified version; examined before vs. after the manipulations) | |
| Tiggemann and Andrew, | A within-participants experimental design of 2 (condition: high vs. low objectification) × 2 (setting: public vs. private); BMI and TSO were measured as potential moderators | Imagining oneself wearing either a swimsuit or a sweater, either in public or in a dressing room | state self-objectification (measured using the body-surveillance subscale of the Objectified Body Consciousness Scale; McKinley and Hyde, | |
| Calogero, | A two-cell experimental design (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) | Writing about a time when one felt sexually objectified by another person vs. about what one would do with a $50 Target gift card | ||
| Michaels et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying); sexual orientation was measured as a potential moderator | Exposure to muscularity-idealizing media images (muscular shirtless men) vs. neutral images (animals, landscapes, and non-human objects) | ||
| Rollero, | A 2 (gender: men, women) x 3 (condition: objectification of men, objectification of women, no objectification) | Exposure to advertisements depicting objectified male models, objectified female models, or non-human objects | ||
| Calogero et al., | A three-cell experimental design (condition: sexually objectifying, non-objectifying physicality, or neutral content) Appearance control beliefs were measured as a covariate | Answering scrambled sentences test containing either sexually objectifying words (e.g., “sexiness”), words related to non-objectifying physicality (e.g., “health”), or neutral words (e.g., “car”) | ||
| Fox et al., | A 2 (watching vs. controlling an avatar) X 2 (avatar type: sexualized vs. non-sexualized) TSO was measured as a covariate | Controlling or watching sexualized (e.g., wearing exposed clothes) or non-sexualized female avatars using the Second | TST (used as the primary DV) | |
| Fox et al., | A 2 (avatar type: sexualized vs. non-sexualized) X 2 (similar vs. dissimilar to the participant) | Controlling sexualized vs. non-sexualized female avatars | TST (used as a DV) | |
| Green et al., | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 4 within-participants conditions (high vs. low objectification and two types of control) Baseline heart rate (HR) was measured prior to the assignment to experimental conditions | Following a measure of their baseline HR, participants tried on swimsuits while looking in the mirror (high-objectification), tracksuits while looking in the mirror (low-objectification), and perfume without looking in the mirror (no-objectification), and observed nature images (no-objectification). The order of these four conditions was randomized | ||
| Kozak et al., | A 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) x 2 (posture: upright vs. slouched) x 2(Power: Type of chair: throne vs. child's) TSO was measured as a covariate | Trying on a tank top vs. a loose sweatshirt | ||
| Aubrey and Gerding, | A two-cell experimental design (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) | Exposure to videos of female musicians that are either low or high in sexual objectification (sexual objectification operationalized as degree of body exposure, close-up shots of sexual body parts, and suggestive dance, moves, or gestures in the presence of a male audience) | ||
| Ford et al., | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 2 (condition: sexist and objectifying vs. non-sexist and non-objectifying) | Rating the degree of funniness of four comedy clips, which were either sexist and objectifying (portraying women as sex objects whose value is derived from physical appearance and depicting women as inferior to men) or neutral | State self-objectification (using a modified version of the Self-Objectification Questionnaire, SOQ) | |
| Ford et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: sexist, objectifying vs. non-sexist, non-objectifying clips) | Watching sexist and objectifying vs. neutral comedy clips in an imagined group setting (a role playing task) | TST (used as a DV) | |
| Krawczyk and Thompson, | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) experimental design; internalization of cultural appearance ideals was measured as a potential moderator | Watching advertisements that sexually objectify women and portray appearance ideals vs. neutral advertisements | ||
| Register et al., | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying) | Describing oneself from someone else's perspective (“Explain how this other person sees you and compares your body to the “ideal” body for your gender”) vs. writing about one's activities over the last 24 h | ||
| Hopper and Aubrey, | A three-cell experimental design (condition: image of a post-pregnancy celebrity's full body/ image of a post-pregnancy celebrity's face/ image of home décor) | Participants in the objectification conditions were exposed to covers of magazines depicting images of either the full body or the face of celebrities after giving birth, with the title “celebrity after baby. ” The control condition depicted a house décor image | ||
| Guizzo and Cadinu, | A two-cell experimental design (condition: female gaze vs. male gaze); internalization of cultural appearance ideals was measured as a potential moderator | Being photographed from the neck down by either a man or a woman (representing high vs. low objectification conditions) | ||
| Fisher et al., | A two-cell experimental design (condition: being exposed to catcalling scenario videos vs. a control condition). TSO, trait body image, previous objectification experiences and pretest dependent variable scores for objectification and body image were measured as covariates. | Watching a catcalling video which included four women being catcalled by a man while they walked down the street. vs. a control video where the same women walked on the street without the catcalling | TST (used as a DV) | |
| Linder and Daniels, | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 2 (condition: objectifying vs. non-objectifying); Participants' peers preoccupation with body appearance and athlete engagement were measured as potential moderators | Exposure to sexualized vs. non-sexualized (i.e., performance) pictures of same-sex athletes (women viewed female athletes; men viewed male athletes) | TST (used as the primary DV, coded as physicality self-descriptors or self-objectifying statements) | |
| Loughnan et al., | A 2 (self- perception: baseline vs. objectified) x 2(observer's gender: male vs. female) x 2(observer's closeness: known vs. unknown) mixed factorial experimental design (with self-perception as a within-subjects factor) | Writing about a time when one felt objectified by another person. The other person was either male or female, and was either known or unknown to the participant | Other: self-perception of humanity (nature and uniqueness), warmth, competence and morality | |
| Prichard et al., | A 2 (presentations of the body: functional vs. non-functional) × 2 (appearance focused text: with vs. without text) × 2 (time: pre-exposure, post-exposure) mixed design. TSO was examined as a moderator | Viewing inspirational fitness images (“ fitspiration”) which depicted the body in a functional vs. non-functional way (i.e., performing exercises vs. posing); exposure vs. no exposure to an appearance-focused text | State self-objectification (using the SOQ pre and post manipulation, used as a DV) | |
| Jiang, | A 2 (revealing nature of the clothing: revealing vs. full) × 2 (tightness of the clothes: tight-fitting vs. loose) × 2 (setting: private vs. public) mixed design. TSO and BMI were measured as covariates | Trying on one of four suits: revealing-loose, revealing-tight, full-loose or full-tight; Setting—personal fitting room vs. public study lounge—manipulated within participants | The body surveillance subscale of the OBCS was measured twice, once in each of the two settings (used as the primary DV) | |
| Kahalon et al., | A three-cell experimental design (type of compliment: achievement-related, appearance-related or no compliment). TSO was measured as a moderator | Writing about a neutral (no compliment) situation or a situation in which a man with whom they were not in an intimate relationship complimented either their academic/professional achievements or their appearance | ||
| Kahalon et al., | A 2 (gender: men vs. women) x 2 (condition: appearance compliment vs. no compliment). TSO was measured as a moderator | Receiving feedback on their curriculum vitae, ostensibly written by a vocational counselor, which either or not complimented their “presentable appearance” |
The papers are ordered by year of publication; within each year, papers are ordered alphabetically, according to the first author's last name. Included in the list are experimental papers that manipulated state self-objectification, searched through Google Scholar and the PsycNET database. We used the following abbreviations: TSO for trait self-objectification, SOQ for self-objectification questionnaire, TST for the Twenty Statements Test, UK for United Kingdom, US for the United States and Mturk for Amazon's Mechanical Turk. The table mentions only manipulation checks that examined state self-objectification but no other variables [e.g., priming death in Goldenberg et al's (.
Figure 1The proposed integrative process model of state self-objectification in women. According to the model, the induction of state self-objectification through objectifying situations (e.g., trying on a swimsuit) can trigger four social-psychological processes (mechanisms), which lead to the host of affective responses, and changes in cognitive performance, motivations, and behaviors that are reported in the experimental literature on this state. In the state self-objectification box, aspects of self-objectification for which additional empirical evidence is required appear in a light gray font; the empirically established aspect of this state appears in a black font.