Sampson Ariane, Jeremiah Huw G, Andiappan Manoharan, Newton J Tim
Faculty of Dentistry, Oral & Craniofacial Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
Orthodontic Department, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK.
J Orthod. 2020 Mar;47(1):55-64. doi: 10.1177/1465312519899664. Epub 2020 Feb 7.
The objective of this randomised controlled trial (RCT) is to investigate the effect of a social networking site (SNS) on body dissatisfaction, facial and smile dissatisfaction, and face-related discrepancy, and whether these effects differ from the use of appearance-neutral Instagram images. We also aimed to investigate whether there are trends in increased self-reported use of social media and increased body dissatisfaction, facial and smile dissatisfaction, and face-related discrepancy.
Undergraduate students were randomly allocated to an experimental group with idealised smile images or to a control group with neutral nature images. They completed pre-exposure questionnaires, then perused for 5 min their allocated images on individual Apple iPads via the Instagram application. Participants then completed the post-exposure surveys. The main outcome was facial dissatisfaction. Body dissatisfaction and total facial and body dissatisfaction were secondary outcomes. Simple randomisation was achieved with a computerised random number generator. Data were analysed using repeated measures ANOVA and multivariate regression analyses.
A total of 132 participants (mean age = 20.50 ± 2.21 years) were randomised to either the experimental group with idealised smile images (n=71) or the control group with neutral nature images (n=61). Baseline characteristics were similar between groups and no participants were lost. Exposure to 'ideal' facial images on social media decreases facial satisfaction (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.85-1.05; < 0.0001). Individuals with high baseline self-discrepancy scores are less satisfied with their facial features and body appearance (95% CI = 0.04-1.16; = 0.036).
This study shows that viewing SNSs with high visual media reduces satisfaction with facial appearance in the short term in men and women. This effect is greater in those with high self-discrepancy scores. Increased media usage was not correlated with increased dissatisfaction. Wearing braces or having had braces was shown not to influence post-exposure dissatisfaction.
本随机对照试验(RCT)的目的是研究社交网站(SNS)对身体不满、面部及笑容不满以及与面部相关的差异的影响,以及这些影响是否与使用外观中性的Instagram图片不同。我们还旨在研究自我报告的社交媒体使用增加以及身体不满、面部及笑容不满和与面部相关的差异增加是否存在趋势。
本科生被随机分配到观看理想化笑容图片的实验组或观看中性自然图片的对照组。他们先完成暴露前问卷,然后通过Instagram应用程序在个人苹果iPad上浏览分配给他们的图片5分钟。参与者随后完成暴露后调查。主要结果是面部不满。身体不满以及面部和身体的总体不满是次要结果。使用计算机随机数生成器实现简单随机化。使用重复测量方差分析和多元回归分析对数据进行分析。
共有132名参与者(平均年龄=20.50±2.21岁)被随机分配到观看理想化笑容图片的实验组(n = 71)或观看中性自然图片的对照组(n = 61)。两组的基线特征相似,没有参与者流失。在社交媒体上接触“理想”面部图片会降低面部满意度(95%置信区间[CI]=0.85 - 1.05;P<0.0001)。基线自我差异得分高的个体对自己的面部特征和身体外观不太满意(95%CI = 0.04 - 1.16;P = 0.036)。
本研究表明,短期内,观看具有高视觉效果媒体的社交网站会降低男性和女性对面部外观的满意度。这种影响在自我差异得分高的人群中更大。媒体使用增加与不满增加无关。研究表明,佩戴牙套或曾佩戴过牙套不会影响暴露后的不满情绪。