1. Consumer warning versus systemic change: The effects of including disclaimer labels on images that have or have not been digitally modified on body image
- Author
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Rachel F. Rodgers, Elisa S. Danthinne, and Francesca E. Giorgianni
- Subjects
Adult ,050103 clinical psychology ,Positive body image ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,050109 social psychology ,Personal Satisfaction ,Young Adult ,Thinness ,Advertising ,Body Image ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Mass Media ,General Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,business.industry ,Image (category theory) ,05 social sciences ,Disclaimer ,Pattern recognition ,Limiting ,Negative mood ,Affect ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
Two strategies for protecting body image against the negative effects of exposure to idealized media images have been proposed: (1) using labels to alert viewers to digital retouching, (2) limiting digital retouching. This study investigated the effects digitally modified vs.unmodified images and the use of labels on those images (disclaimer/retouch-free] vs. unlabeled) on appearance satisfaction and mood. Trait upwards appearance comparison, media ideal internalization, media similarity, and body appreciation were explored as moderators. Participants (n = 614, women, 18-30 years) viewed the same ten images of female figures (both thin ideal and size/shape diverse images) across four conditions: (1) unmodified, unlabelled, (2) unmodified, labelled, (3) modified, labelled, and (4) modified, unlabelled images. Exposure to unmodified images was shown to be less harmful than exposure to modified images. Neither label type was associated with more positive outcomes compared to their counterpart unlabelled conditions. State appearance comparison was highest in the two labelled conditions. Trait upwards appearance comparison and media ideal internalization to some extent moderated effects on negative mood. Findings provide additional evidence that disclaimer labels on digitally modified images are not helpful for body image, while images that depart from the thin-ideal can contribute to promoting positive body image.
- Published
- 2020
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