Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.
Int J Eat Disord. 2014 Jul;47(5):437-47. doi: 10.1002/eat.22258. Epub 2014 Jan 30.
Social psychological theories provide bases for understanding how social comparison processes may impact peer influence. This study examined two peer characteristics that may impact peer influence on adolescent girls' weight-related behavior intentions: body size and popularity.
A school-based sample of 66 9th grade girls (12-15 years old) completed an experimental paradigm in which they believed they were interacting with other students (i.e., "e-confederates"). The body size and popularity of the e-confederates were experimentally manipulated. Participants were randomly assigned to one of the three experimental conditions in which they were exposed to identical maladaptive weight-related behavior norms communicated by ostensible female peers who were either: (1) Thin and Popular; (2) Thin and Average Popularity; or (3) Heavy and Average Popularity. Participants' intent to engage in weight-related behaviors was measured pre-experiment and during public and private segments of the experiment.
A significant effect of condition on public conformity was observed. Participants exposed to peers' maladaptive weight-related behavior norms in the Heavy and Average condition reported significantly less intent to engage in weight-related behaviors than participants in either of the thin-peer conditions (F(2) = 3.93, p = .025). Peer influence on private acceptance of weight-related behavior intentions was similar across conditions (F(2) = .47, p = .63).
Body size comparison may be the most salient component of peer influence processes on weight-related behaviors. Peer influence on weight-related behavior intention also appears to impact private beliefs. Considering peer norms in preventive interventions combined with dissonance-based approaches may be useful.
社会心理学理论为理解社会比较过程如何影响同伴对青少年女孩体重相关行为意向的影响提供了基础。本研究考察了可能影响同伴对少女体重相关行为意向影响的两个同伴特征:体型和受欢迎程度。
一项基于学校的 66 名 9 年级女孩(12-15 岁)的样本完成了一项实验范式,在该范式中,她们相信自己正在与其他学生(即“电子同盟者”)互动。电子同盟者的体型和受欢迎程度被实验操纵。参与者被随机分配到三个实验条件之一,在这些条件下,他们接触到由看似女性同伴传达的相同的适应不良的体重相关行为规范,这些同伴要么是:(1)瘦且受欢迎;(2)瘦且普通受欢迎;或(3)胖且普通受欢迎。参与者的体重相关行为意向在实验前和实验的公共和私人部分进行测量。
观察到条件对公共从众的显著影响。与在胖且普通受欢迎条件下接触到同伴适应不良的体重相关行为规范的参与者相比,参与者报告的参与体重相关行为的意向明显减少,而与任何瘦同伴条件下的参与者相比(F(2)= 3.93,p =.025)。条件对体重相关行为意向的私人接受的影响相似(F(2)=.47,p =.63)。
体型比较可能是同伴对体重相关行为影响过程中最突出的组成部分。同伴对体重相关行为意向的影响似乎也会影响私人信念。考虑到同伴规范在预防干预中结合基于不和谐的方法可能是有用的。