a Department of Psychology , University of Toronto , Mississauga , Ontario L5L 1C6 , Canada.
Health Psychol Rev. 2014;8(3):319-38. doi: 10.1080/17437199.2013.775630. Epub 2013 Mar 6.
Nutritionists are well aware that people tend to underreport their weights, but psychologists still often rely on weight self-reports. The present paper reviews research on weight underreporting and attempts to identify its underlying motivations. Restrained eaters (and overweight individuals) are especially likely to underreport their weight. We examine potential reasons for such underreporting in these groups, including (1) perceptual biases that make people misperceive body weight; (2) an impression-management/self-presentation strategy (telling others that one has a more socially desirable weight); or (3) self-protection, with underreporting allowing one to protect self-esteem by convincing oneself that one is thinner than is really the case. The evidence indicates that overweight and restrained women underreport their weight in an attempt to protect themselves. The consistent and motivated underreporting of weight by restrained eaters not only illuminates their psychological functioning, but indicates a bias that may be problematic for research that relies on self-reports.
营养学家深知人们往往会低估自己的体重,但心理学家仍然经常依赖体重自我报告。本文综述了体重低估的研究,并试图确定其潜在的动机。节制饮食者(和超重者)尤其可能会低估自己的体重。我们研究了这些群体中体重低估的潜在原因,包括:(1)感知偏差使人们错误地感知体重;(2)印象管理/自我呈现策略(告诉别人自己的体重更符合社会期望);或(3)自我保护,通过低估体重,使自己相信自己比实际情况更瘦,从而保护自尊心。有证据表明,超重和节制饮食的女性会低估自己的体重,以保护自己。节制饮食者持续且有动机地低估体重,不仅揭示了他们的心理功能,还表明了一种偏见,这可能会对依赖自我报告的研究产生问题。