4.3 Article

Adolescents' Body Shame and Social Networking Sites: The Mediating Effect of Body Image Control in Photos

Journal

SEX ROLES
Volume 83, Issue 11-12, Pages 773-785

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11199-020-01142-0

Keywords

Body shame; Self-objectification; Body image; Problematic social network sites use; Social networking; Adolescence

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Adolescents' social networking site (SNS) use has dramatically grown in the past few years and has increasingly become focused on pictures and visual self-presentation. Attention directed toward online physical appearance appears to trigger some body-related behaviors (e.g., body image monitoring) which potentially are related to self-objectification and problematic SNS use. Indeed, the use of social media platforms (including the active creation of content and peer interactions) provides a highly accessible medium for socializing with self-objectification. The present study evaluated the previously unexplored predictive role of body shame on SNS use, testing the mediating effect of body image control in photos on SNS. A total of 693 Italian adolescents (45% male; M-age = 16 years, range = 13-19 years) participated in the study. Results only partially confirmed the direct effect of body shame on problematic SNS use. However, body shame strongly predicted body image control in SNS photos, leading indirectly to both male and female adolescents' problematic social media use. The study demonstrated novel findings in the field of self-objectification research and contributes toward the ongoing debate on possible predictors of problematic SNS use.

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