Chatterton Justine, Petrie Trent A, Schuler Keke L, Ruggero Camilo
1 University of North Texas.
J Sport Exerc Psychol. 2017 Oct 1;39(5):313-326. doi: 10.1123/jsep.2016-0257. Epub 2017 Nov 28.
We tested Petrie and Greenleaf's psychosocial model in relation to male athletes' bulimic symptomatology. Through structural equation modeling, we cross-sectionally examined the direct and indirect effects of general and sport-specific appearance pressures, internalization, body satisfaction, drive for muscularity, negative affect, and dietary restraint on bulimic symptomatology. Participants were U.S. male collegiate athletes (N = 698; M = 19.87 years) representing 17 sports. With minor respecifications, the model had acceptable fit, and the psychosocial variables explained 48% of the bulimic symptomatology variance. Although all variable paths were significant, sport pressures, such as from coaches and teammates about weight, importance of appearance, and looking good in a uniform, were the most salient latent variable. Athletes' engagement in muscle-building behaviors added uniquely and substantively as well. Our analysis begins to clarify the complex interactions among these psychosocial variables in understanding male athletes' bulimic symptomatology and provides a base from which to develop prevention programming.
我们针对男性运动员的暴食症状对皮特里和格林利夫的社会心理模型进行了测试。通过结构方程模型,我们横断面地研究了一般和特定运动的外表压力、内化、身体满意度、肌肉增强欲、消极情绪以及饮食限制对暴食症状的直接和间接影响。参与者为代表17项运动的美国男性大学生运动员(N = 698;平均年龄M = 19.87岁)。经过轻微调整,该模型具有可接受的拟合度,且社会心理变量解释了48%的暴食症状变异。尽管所有变量路径均具有显著性,但来自教练和队友关于体重、外表重要性以及穿制服好看等方面的运动压力是最显著的潜在变量。运动员参与肌肉锻炼行为也具有独特且实质性的作用。我们的分析开始阐明这些社会心理变量在理解男性运动员暴食症状方面的复杂相互作用,并为制定预防计划提供了一个基础。