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Factorial Model of Obese Adolescents: The Role of Body Image Concerns and Selective Depersonalization—A Pilot Study

Authors :
Marco La Marra
Antonietta Messina
Ciro Rosario Ilardi
Maria Staiano
Girolamo Di Maio
Giovanni Messina
Rita Polito
Anna Valenzano
Giuseppe Cibelli
Vincenzo Monda
Sergio Chieffi
Alessandro Iavarone
Ines Villano
La Marra, Marco
Messina, Antonietta
Ilardi, Ciro Rosario
Staiano, Maria
Di Maio, Girolamo
Messina, Giovanni
Polito, Rita
Valenzano, Anna
Cibelli, Giuseppe
Monda, Vincenzo
Chieffi, Sergio
Iavarone, Alessandro
Villano, Ines
Source :
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health; Volume 19; Issue 18; Pages: 11501
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Background: The relationship binding body weight to psychological well-being is unclear. The present study aims at identifying the contribution, and specificity, of some dimensions (i.e., eating-related symptoms, body image disorders, eating habits, personality traits, and emotional difficulties) characterizing the psychological profile of obese adolescents (749 participants, 325 females; 58.3% normal-weight, 29.9% overweight, and 11.7% obese; mean age = 16.05, SD = 0.82). Methods: By introducing the scores obtained by standardized self-report tools into a generalized linear model, a factorial reduction design was used to detect the best fitting discriminant functions and the principal components explaining the higher proportion of the variance. Results: We found two discriminant functions correctly classifying 87.1% of normal-weight, 57.2% of overweight, and 68.2% of obese adolescents. Furthermore, two independent factors, explaining 69.68% of the total variance, emerged. Conclusions: The first factor, “Body Image Concerns”, included the drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction, and interpersonal distrust. The second factor, “Selective Depersonalization”, included a trend toward depersonalization and dissatisfaction with the torso. The neurophysiological implications of our findings will be discussed.

Details

ISSN :
16604601
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb20c56a6f9ac55477a888524c1b7f22