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Associations between appearance-related self-discrepancies and young women's and men's affect, body satisfaction, and emotional eating: a comparison of fixed-item and participant-generated self-discrepancies

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:23 authored by Emma Halliwell, Helga Dittmar
This study examines the associations between appearance related, actual-ideal self-discrepancies-from both own and romantic partner's standpoints-and negative affect, body satisfaction, and eating behavior. It extends previous research through studying both genders and the romantic partner standpoint, but its main novel contribution is a systematic comparison between idiographic, participant-generated, and nomothetic, fixed-item measures of appearance-related self-discrepancies. The findings show that these measures cannot be, and should not be, treated as equivalent. The idiographic measures were superior in predicting outcome variables when considering the own standpoint. Nomothetic measures did demonstrate some gender-specific associations, but only from the romantic partner standpoint, and only for women. These findings can be explained with respect to the assessment of accessible, versus available, self-discrepancies. Implications for self-discrepancy and body image theory and research are discussed.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

ISSN

0146-1672

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Issue

4

Volume

32

Page range

447-458

Pages

12.0

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Notes

Senior author. Halliwell was Dittmar's research student.

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-02-06

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