An investigation of Inhibition of Return to Body Information in Young Women with High or Low Shape/Weight-Based Self-Worth
Abstract
Body image disturbance and disordered eating are widespread
problems that are associated with a large number of serious
physical and psychological consequences. Current cognitive models
of body image disturbance and eating disorders emphasise the
central role of an individual’s beliefs about the importance of
their shape and weight for their self-worth in the development
and maintenance of these problems. These beliefs are proposed to
partially exert their impact through their effect on information
processing. The current research program aimed to investigate
differences in one component of attention, namely, attention
maintenance regarding body stimuli in individuals who base their
self-worth on their shape and weight, using an attentional cuing
paradigm, Inhibition of Return (IOR). IOR is an operation of the
visual system that inhibits attention from returning to
previously attended locations to encourage attention to be
directed to new locations.
The first study hypothesised that young women who base their
self-worth on their shape and weight would display attentional
biases regarding thin-ideal and non-thin body images assessed
using an attentional cueing paradigm measuring IOR. The results
revealed that participants (n= 57) who do not base their
self-worth on their shape/weight displayed less attention to
non-thin body stimuli compared with control stimuli. This
differential pattern of attention was not observed in
participants who based their self-worth on their shape/weight.
The second study employed the same spatial cuing paradigm
measuring IOR to examine differences in attention for thin and
non-thin body words, depending on level of shape/weight-based
self-worth. It was found that participants (n = 105) who did not
base their self-worth on their shape and weight displayed reduced
IOR from non-thin body words compared with control words, whereas
no difference was found for participants who based their
self-worth on their shape/weight. In combination, the findings
from Study One and Study Two revealed an opposite pattern for the
processing on non-thin images versus non-thin words in young
women with low levels of shape/weight-based self-worth.
The third study provided an investigation of the effect of
interpersonal rejection on attentional biases to thin-ideal and
non-thin body images in young women (n = 90) with high and low
levels of shape/weight-based self-worth. The results showed that
despite the interpersonal rejection paradigm being effective in
reducing self-esteem, it did not modify attentional biases. The
results also replicated the findings from Study One in that,
irrespective of acceptance/rejection condition, participants who
did not base their self-worth on their shape/weight displayed
increased IOR for non-thin body images.
Overall, the findings of the current program of research indicate
that young women who do not base their self-worth on their
shape/weight display differential patterns of attention
suggestive of reduced processing of non-thin body images and,
possibly, increased processing of non-thin body words. This
potentially adaptive pattern was not evident in young women who
base their self-worth on their shape/weight. The pattern of
results provides novel information regarding protective factors
for body image disturbance and eating disorders, thereby
suggesting refinements of theoretical models and potentially
informing new directions in the prevention and treatment of these
conditions.
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