Webb Jennifer B, Fiery Mallory F, Jafari Nadia
University of North Carolina at Charlotte Health Psychology Ph.D. Program, Charlotte, NC, United States.
University of North Carolina at Charlotte Health Psychology Ph.D. Program, Charlotte, NC, United States.
Body Image. 2016 Sep;18:5-13. doi: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2016.04.009. Epub 2016 May 26.
The present investigation provided a theoretically-driven analysis testing whether body shame helped account for the predicted positive associations between explicit weight bias in the form of possessing anti-fat attitudes (i.e., dislike, fear of fat, and willpower beliefs) and engaging in fat talk among 309 weight-diverse college women. We also evaluated whether self-compassion served as a protective factor in these relationships. Robust non-parametric bootstrap resampling procedures adjusted for body mass index (BMI) revealed stronger indirect and conditional indirect effects for dislike and fear of fat attitudes and weaker, marginal effects for the models inclusive of willpower beliefs. In general, the indirect effect of anti-fat attitudes on fat talk via body shame declined with increasing levels of self-compassion. Our preliminary findings may point to useful process variables to target in mitigating the impact of endorsing anti-fat prejudice on fat talk in college women and may help clarify who is at higher risk.
本研究提供了一项理论驱动的分析,检验身体羞耻感是否有助于解释在309名体重各异的大学女生中,以持有反胖态度(即厌恶、害怕肥胖和意志力信念)形式存在的显性体重偏见与参与“胖语”之间预测的正向关联。我们还评估了自我同情是否在这些关系中起到保护作用。针对体重指数(BMI)调整的稳健非参数自助重抽样程序显示,厌恶和害怕肥胖态度的间接效应和条件间接效应更强,而包含意志力信念的模型的效应较弱且处于边缘水平。总体而言,反胖态度通过身体羞耻感对“胖语”的间接效应随着自我同情水平的提高而下降。我们的初步研究结果可能指出了一些有用的过程变量,可用于减轻支持反胖偏见对大学女生“胖语”的影响,并可能有助于阐明谁面临的风险更高。