Personality, self-appraisals, and body conscious emotions as predictors of symptoms of body dysmorphia and restrictive disordered eating

Andrew R. du Rocher, Carrie-Anne Anderson, Yasmin Ashkar, Isabel Leung, Hayley Lynch, Maya Shah, Abigail Vincent, Katie Watkinson
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Abstract

Anorexia nervosa and body dysmorphic disorder are often co-morbid and relate to distortions in the perception of self-appearance. It has been proposed that they should be placed in a new body image disorders category in the DSM. Dimensional perspectives suggest that clinical and sub-clinical manifestations of these psychopathologies reside on the same continuum. We explored the correlates of sub-clinical restrictive disordered eating, and sub-clinical body dysmorphia in 396 participants. Our online study tested how sub-clinical restrictive disordered eating, and body dysmorphia relate to self-perceived attractiveness, self-esteem, body-shame, body-pride, authentic and hubristic pride, and personality as described in revised reinforcement sensitivity theory. Body dysmorphia shared significantly stronger positive correlations than restrictive disordered eating with behavioral inhibition sensitivity, body-shame, and body-guilt, and significantly stronger negative correlations with self-esteem, and self-perceived attractiveness. Restrictive disordered eating and body dysmorphia were negatively correlated with authentic and hubristic pride. Hierarchical regression showed that reinforcement sensitivity explained more variance in body dysmorphia than in restrictive disordered eating (Model 1). Self-esteem and self-perceived attractiveness explained more of the additional variance in body dysmorphia than in restrictive disordered eating (Model 2), as did the addition of body-shame, body-pride, authentic and hubristic pride (Model 3). Sub-clinical restrictive disordered eating and body dysmorphia relate to several constructs that may be important in understanding the development and/or maintenance of two proposed body image disorders: anorexia nervosa and body dysmorphic disorder.
人格、自我评价和身体意识情绪作为身体畸形和限制性进食障碍症状的预测因子
神经性厌食症和身体变形障碍通常是共病的,与自我外表感知的扭曲有关。已经提出,它们应该被放在DSM中的一个新的身体图像障碍类别中。维度视角表明,这些精神病理学的临床和亚临床表现存在于同一连续体上。我们在396名参与者中探讨了亚临床限制性饮食紊乱和亚临床身体畸形的相关性。我们的在线研究测试了亚临床限制性饮食紊乱和身体畸形如何与自我感知的吸引力、自尊、身体羞耻感、身体自豪感、真实和傲慢的自豪感以及人格相关,如修订的强化敏感性理论所述。与限制性饮食相比,身体畸形与行为抑制敏感性、身体羞耻感和身体内疚感的正相关显著更强,与自尊和自我感知吸引力的负相关显著更强。限制性饮食紊乱和身体畸形与真正的傲慢和自大呈负相关。分层回归显示,强化敏感性比限制性饮食紊乱更能解释身体畸形的差异(模型1)。自尊和自我感知的吸引力比限制性饮食紊乱更能解释身体畸形的额外差异(模型2),身体羞耻感、身体自豪感、真实和傲慢自豪感的增加也是如此(模型3)。亚临床限制性进食障碍和身体变形障碍涉及几个结构,这些结构可能对理解两种拟议的身体形象障碍的发展和/或维持很重要:神经性厌食症和身体变形症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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