Grabarek Christina, Cooper Stewart
Valparaiso University, Department of Education, 220 Miller Hall, Valparaiso, IN 46383, USA.
J Gen Psychol. 2008 Oct;135(4):425-51. doi: 10.3200/GENP.135.4.425-452.
The authors explored gender-based patterns of relations between social and emotional functioning and the behaviors empirically supported as being highly potent for eating disorders: drive to be thin and body dissatisfaction. Graduate students between 20 and 25 years of age served as participants. Correlation analyses revealed that for women, personal adjustment and internalizing behaviors had significant relations to drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction. Using hierarchical regression analysis, the authors found that self-esteem contributed to the most variation in the prediction of both outcome variables. A differing pattern emerged for men as drive for muscularity and hyperactivity were most strongly predictive of drive for thinness, but not body dissatisfaction. The authors discuss implications relative to T. L. Tylka and L. M. Subich's (2004) model.
作者探究了社会和情感功能与那些经实证支持对饮食失调具有高度影响力的行为(追求瘦身和身体不满)之间基于性别的关系模式。20至25岁的研究生作为参与者。相关分析表明,对于女性而言,个人调适和内化行为与追求瘦身及身体不满存在显著关系。通过分层回归分析,作者发现自尊在预测这两个结果变量时贡献了最大的变异量。对于男性则呈现出不同的模式,因为追求肌肉发达和多动对追求瘦身的预测作用最强,但对身体不满并无此作用。作者讨论了与T. L. 蒂尔卡和L. M. 苏比奇(2004年)模型相关的影响。