Psychometric properties of measures of sociocultural influence and internalization of appearance ideals across eight countries

Rachel F. Rodgers*, Matthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Charlotte Markey, Antonio Granero-Gallegos, Alvaro Sicilia, Marie Caltabiano, Marie Eve Blackburns, Naomi Hayami-Chisuwa, Esben Strodl, Annie Aimé, Jacinthe Dion, Gianluca Lo Coco, Salvatoree Gullo, Marita McCabe, David Mellor, Gianluca Castelnuovo, Michel Probst, Gianmauro Manzoni, Catherine Begin, Giada PietrabissaManuel Alcaraz-Ibánez, Qiqiang He, Christophe Maïano

*Autor corresponent d’aquest treball

Producció científica: Article en revista indexadaArticleAvaluat per experts

10 Cites (Scopus)

Resum

The aim of the current study was to examine the psychometric properties of two well-established measures of sociocultural influence and internalization of the thin/low body fat ideal and muscular ideal. Data from 6272 emerging adults (68.9 % female), aged 18–30 years from Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Italy, Japan, Spain, and the U.S. were included in this study. Participants completed measures of pressure from mother, fathers, peers, and media, to both increase muscles and lose weight, as well as internalization of the thin/low body fat ideal and muscular ideal. Overall, support for partial invariance was found across the scales. In addition, group level differences were found between countries as well as along demographic factors including gender, age, body mass index, and socioeconomic status. These findings make an important contribution by identifying these scales as useful tools that will support future cross-country and cross-cultural examinations of explanatory models of the development of body image and eating concerns grounded within sociocultural theories.

Idioma originalAnglès
Pàgines (de-a)300-315
Nombre de pàgines16
RevistaBody Image
Volum35
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - de des. 2020
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