自我物化是(仍然)性别化的:一项跨测量和社会背景的元分析

IF 5.4 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Yujiao Guo , Lijuan Xiao , Junhua Dang , Baolin Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在当代社会,自我物化仍然是一种性别化的体验吗?为了解决这个问题,我们对来自16个国家的78项研究的158个效应量进行了三水平的荟萃分析,涉及74,216名参与者。结果显示了明显的性别差异(d = 0.35),女性的自我物化程度始终高于男性。这种差异被测量类型和社会性别平等显著地缓和。身体监测措施产生了最大的性别差距,而且矛盾的是,性别差异在性别平等程度较高的国家更为明显,这支持了性别平等悖论。相反,文化取向(集体主义)、样本年龄和出版年份在多变量模型中没有显著调节效应。这些发现表明,自我物化在很大程度上仍然存在性别差异——在某些情况下,社会文化的进步可能会扩大而不是减少基于外貌的差异。我们强调需要更多对性别敏感的测量工具和基于文化的理论框架,以更好地理解自我物化如何在不同的社会环境中运作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Self-objectification is (Still) gendered: A meta-analysis across measures and societal contexts
Is self-objectification still a gendered experience in contemporary societies? To address this question, we conducted a three-level meta-analysis of 158 effect sizes from 78 studies involving 74,216 participants across 16 countries. Results revealed a robust gender difference (d = 0.35), with women consistently reporting higher self-objectification than men. This difference was significantly moderated by both measurement type and societal gender equality. Body surveillance measures yielded the largest gender gaps, and—paradoxically—gender differences were more pronounced in countries with higher gender equality, supporting the gender-equality paradox. Conversely, cultural orientation (collectivism), sample age, and publication year did not significantly moderate the effect in multivariate models. These findings suggest that self-objectification remains deeply gendered—and that sociocultural progress may, in some contexts, amplify rather than reduce appearance-based disparities. We highlight the need for more gender-sensitive measurement tools and culturally grounded theoretical frameworks to better understand how self-objectification operates across diverse social environments.
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来源期刊
Body Image
Body Image Multiple-
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
28.80%
发文量
174
期刊介绍: Body Image is an international, peer-reviewed journal that publishes high-quality, scientific articles on body image and human physical appearance. Body Image is a multi-faceted concept that refers to persons perceptions and attitudes about their own body, particularly but not exclusively its appearance. The journal invites contributions from a broad range of disciplines-psychological science, other social and behavioral sciences, and medical and health sciences. The journal publishes original research articles, brief research reports, theoretical and review papers, and science-based practitioner reports of interest. Dissertation abstracts are also published online, and the journal gives an annual award for the best doctoral dissertation in this field.
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