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- Social media and body image: Relationships between social media . . .
Research suggests that viewing and internalizing unrealistic body ideals often displayed online may pose harmful effects on young people’s body image However, studies on the relationships between social media usage and body image have predominantly focused on women’s drive for thinness
- #fitspiration: a comparison of the sport-related social media usage and . . .
Regarding the perception of body image, it was found that the group of rejecting (negative) body image significantly correlated with the emulation of social media mediated sport-related beauty and body ideals (r = 0 63, p = 0 001), as well as with increased body dissatisfaction when viewing sport-related posts on social media (r = 0 590, p = 0
- THE EFFECT OF SOCIAL MEDIA ON BODY IMAGE, SELF ESTEEM AND SOCIAL . . .
Unrealistic standards of beauty have been created because of the pervasiveness of highly altered and filtered photos, body ideals, and lifestyles on social media, giving birth to the phenomena known as "social comparison " Social media has a big impact on body image, which is a person's subjective assessment of their own physique
- Fitspiration: Social Medias Fitness Culture and its Effect on Body Image
Through a content analysis of current literature, I provide connections between the marketing of fitness in American media and its influence on men and women’s body image Using social comparison theory, I analyze prior research that explains the causes of body dissatisfaction and explain social media’s role in this
- Idealised media images: The effect of fitspiration imagery on body . . .
The present study experimentally investigated the impact of athletic and muscular fitness-idealised images compared to traditional thin ideal images on women’s body dissatisfaction and exercise behaviour, under the framework of Social Comparison Theory
- Social Media and Body Image Concerns: Current Research and Future . . .
Correlational Research Several correlational studies have examined the rela-tionship between social media usage and body image Studies on pre-teenage girls [14] and female high school students [15 ,16] have found that Facebook users report more drive for thinness, internalization of the thin-ideal, body surveillance, self-objectification, and appearance comparisons than do non-users Research
- SCROLLING INTO SELF-PERCEPTION: A COMPREHENSIVE LITERATURE REVIEW ON . . .
Abstract Social media has influenced body image, particularly among adolescents and young adults This review examines how social media exposure contributes to body dissatisfaction, the internalization of thin and muscular ideals, and decreased self-esteem Research highlights that idealized images, social comparisons, and algorithm-driven content create unrealistic beauty standards, leading
- Objectification and body image have become less prominent in social . . .
Fitness-themed social media posts have become slightly less focussed on body image and more focused on motivating people to take part in exercise over the last ten years, a new study suggests However, the researchers warn that a lot of content still risks perpetuating stigma about weight due to a lack of body diversity depicted in posts
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