Advertisements often display ideal female bodies which create unattainable standards of beauty, generating body anxiety and disorders in female viewers. Accordingly, public health concerns would encourage the use of natural, unedited models in advertisements. However, the advertising performance of natural models remains contentious. We argue that previous inconsistent findings about this performance may result from a complex causal framework in which natural models impact performance through two affective mediators (body anxiety, and repulsion toward the model), while allowing moderation by the viewer's own body mass index (BMI). Data collected in a nationally representative sample of 400 young women largely (but not entirely) validate thi...
Advertisements featuring ideally beautiful women have been criticised for creating a "cult of unreal...
Background: There is a ubiquitous societal trend to define one’s self-worth based on externalities s...
Weight and body concerns have reached epidemic proportions among female college students. Such high ...
Advertisements often display ideal female bodies which create unattainable standards of beauty, gene...
An increasing number of studies shows that exposure to thin ideal bodies in the media has negative e...
Previous experimental research indicates that the use of average-size women models in advertising pr...
Previous research suggests that people high in social comparison and body dissatisfaction perceive a...
Despite consensus that exposure to media images of thin fashion models is associated with poor body ...
Previous experimental research demonstrates that exposure to ultra-thin media models has negative ef...
There has been a shift in the depiction of women in advertising from objectifying representations of...
We explore how more revealing displays of models' bodies in advertising impact individuals' body est...
This experimental study examined the impact of exposure to advertisements that did or did not depict...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [78]-85)The purpose of this study was to test a model whi...
There has been a shift in the depiction of women in advertising from objectifying representations of...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate if brand might affect consumers’ response to replacing s...
Advertisements featuring ideally beautiful women have been criticised for creating a "cult of unreal...
Background: There is a ubiquitous societal trend to define one’s self-worth based on externalities s...
Weight and body concerns have reached epidemic proportions among female college students. Such high ...
Advertisements often display ideal female bodies which create unattainable standards of beauty, gene...
An increasing number of studies shows that exposure to thin ideal bodies in the media has negative e...
Previous experimental research indicates that the use of average-size women models in advertising pr...
Previous research suggests that people high in social comparison and body dissatisfaction perceive a...
Despite consensus that exposure to media images of thin fashion models is associated with poor body ...
Previous experimental research demonstrates that exposure to ultra-thin media models has negative ef...
There has been a shift in the depiction of women in advertising from objectifying representations of...
We explore how more revealing displays of models' bodies in advertising impact individuals' body est...
This experimental study examined the impact of exposure to advertisements that did or did not depict...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [78]-85)The purpose of this study was to test a model whi...
There has been a shift in the depiction of women in advertising from objectifying representations of...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate if brand might affect consumers’ response to replacing s...
Advertisements featuring ideally beautiful women have been criticised for creating a "cult of unreal...
Background: There is a ubiquitous societal trend to define one’s self-worth based on externalities s...
Weight and body concerns have reached epidemic proportions among female college students. Such high ...