Appearance-Related Social Networking Sites and Body Image in Young Women: Testing an Objectification-Social Comparison Model

In this study, we drew on an integrated model of objectification and social comparison theories to test the associations between young women’s use of social networking sites and their body image concerns. A sample of 338 undergraduate women, aged 17–25 years, completed online questionnaire measures...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology of women quarterly 2020-09, Vol.44 (3), p.377-392
Hauptverfasser: Seekis, Veya, Bradley, Graham L., Duffy, Amanda L.
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Duffy, Amanda L.
description In this study, we drew on an integrated model of objectification and social comparison theories to test the associations between young women’s use of social networking sites and their body image concerns. A sample of 338 undergraduate women, aged 17–25 years, completed online questionnaire measures of engagement in three social networking site activities (browsing or following celebrity, fashion, and beauty sites, browsing or following fitspiration-related content, and placing importance on online “likes” and comments). Also assessed were upward appearance comparison, body surveillance, social appearance anxiety, and two indices of body image concerns (drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction). Structural equation modeling was used to test two competing models, both of which posited social appearance anxiety as the immediate precursor to body image concerns. In line with the integrated objectification-social comparison model, results supported a serial mediation model that comprised significant paths from two of the social networking site activities (browsing or following celebrity, fashion, and beauty sites, and placing importance on online “likes” and comments) through, in turn, upward appearance comparison, body surveillance, and social appearance anxiety, to drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction. Viewing fitspiration-related content was associated with body image concerns directly, rather than indirectly. Findings highlight objectification and appearance comparison factors as targets for future interventions regarding appearance-related social networking site use.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0361684320920826
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Journals
subjects Anxiety
Beauty
Body image
Celebrities
Discontent
Feminism
Feminist psychology
Networking
Objectification
Psychology
Self image
Social anxiety
Social comparison
Social networks
Surveillance
Thinness
Womens studies
Young women
title Appearance-Related Social Networking Sites and Body Image in Young Women: Testing an Objectification-Social Comparison Model
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