Social and Applied Psychology Research Group, Department of Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
Body Image. 2010 Mar;7(2):172-5. doi: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2010.01.002. Epub 2010 Feb 24.
Sociocultural theory attributes the high levels of body image concerns and disordered eating in Western women to the promotion of an unrealistically thin body ideal. This study investigated body dissatisfaction, restrained eating, and attitudes toward appearance in visually impaired and sighted women. There were 21 congenitally blind, 11 blinded later in life, and 60 sighted. Blind women were more satisfied with their body and dieted less than sighted women. Appearance attitudes, particularly thin-ideal internalization, accounted for differences in body dissatisfaction and dieting among the three groups of women. Possible explanations for our findings are considered, including the importance of visual exposure to the media's thin ideal, as well as the usefulness of future research on blind women.
社会文化理论将西方女性高水平的身体意象问题和饮食失调归因于对不切实际的瘦体型理想的推崇。本研究调查了视障和视力正常女性的身体不满、节食和对外表的态度。其中 21 人为先天性失明,11 人后天失明,60 人为视力正常。与视力正常的女性相比,盲女对自己的身体更满意,节食也更少。对外表的态度,尤其是对瘦理想的内化,解释了这三组女性在身体不满和节食方面的差异。我们对研究结果进行了探讨,包括视觉接触媒体瘦理想的重要性,以及对盲女进行未来研究的有用性。