Schleien Jenna L, Bardone-Cone Anna M
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB #3270, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Body Image. 2016 Jun;17:30-7. doi: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2016.01.009. Epub 2016 Feb 27.
The present study examined competitiveness as a moderator of the relationships between appearance-related factors (i.e., thin-ideal internalization, appearance contingent self-worth) and disordered eating behaviors (i.e., dieting, excessive exercise). Participants were 441 undergraduate females for cross-sectional analyses, with 237 also contributing data longitudinally, 1 year later. Results showed that, in a model including thin-ideal internalization and appearance contingent self-worth and their interactions with competitiveness, thin-ideal internalization (but not appearance contingent self-worth) interacted with competitiveness to identify concurrent levels of both dieting and excessive exercise. Individuals high in both thin-ideal internalization and competitiveness exhibited the highest levels of concurrent dieting and excessive exercise. After controlling for baseline levels of the dependent variables, neither appearance-related factor interacted with competitiveness to predict dieting or excessive exercise. These findings suggest that individuals who are both competitive and accept and strive to achieve the thin ideal may be at risk for disordered eating behaviors.
本研究考察了竞争作为外表相关因素(即对瘦理想的内化、外表依赖的自我价值)与饮食失调行为(即节食、过度运动)之间关系的调节变量。441名本科女生参与了横断面分析,其中237人在1年后也提供了纵向数据。结果表明,在一个包含对瘦理想的内化、外表依赖的自我价值及其与竞争的相互作用的模型中,对瘦理想的内化(而非外表依赖的自我价值)与竞争相互作用,以确定同时存在的节食和过度运动水平。在对瘦理想的内化和竞争方面得分都高的个体,同时出现节食和过度运动的水平最高。在控制了因变量的基线水平后,外表相关因素与竞争均未相互作用以预测节食或过度运动。这些发现表明,既具有竞争性又接受并努力实现瘦理想的个体可能存在饮食失调行为的风险。