Lombardo Caterina, Battagliese Gemma, Pezzuti Lina, Lucidi Fabio
Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Via dei Marsi 78, 00185, Rome, Italy,
Eat Weight Disord. 2014;19(3):329-36. doi: 10.1007/s40519-013-0085-0. Epub 2013 Nov 22.
This study aimed to provide data concerning the validity of a short sequence of face valid pictorial stimuli assessing the perception of body size in school-age children. A sequence of gender and age-appropriate silhouettes was administered to 314 boys and girls aged 6-14 years. The self-evaluations provided by the children correlated significantly with their actual BMI corrected for age. Furthermore, the children's self-evaluations always significantly correlated with the evaluations provided by the three external observers; i.e., both parents and the interviewers. The results indicate that this sequence of pictorial stimuli, depicting realistic human forms appropriate for children, is a valid measure of children's body image. Relevant differences across age groups were also found, indicating that before the age of eight, the correlations between the children's self-evaluations and their BMI or the judgments of the three observers are lower than in the other age groups.