British Journal of Social Psychology, volume 61, issue 1, pages 366-388
Self‐objectification in women predicts approval motivation in online self‐presentation
Shilei Chen
1
,
Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg
2
,
Patrick J Leman
3
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-07-20
Journal:
British Journal of Social Psychology
scimago Q1
SJR: 2.190
CiteScore: 9.5
Impact factor: 3.2
ISSN: 01446665, 20448309
PubMed ID:
34287958
Social Psychology
Abstract
Researchers have examined self-objectification - viewing oneself as an object rather than a subject - in terms of its impact on intrapersonal factors, such as mental health and cognitive performance. However, few have examined how self-objectification relates to interpersonal factors. The present research addressed this gap by testing the impact of self-objectification on social approval motivation among women. Study 1 (n = 103) found that individual differences in self-objectification correlated positively with approval motivation. Study 2 (n = 94) replicated these results and found that women who reported higher self-objectification were more willing to modify their social media profile pictures unrealistically. In Study 3 (n = 100), higher self-objectifying women were more willing to unrealistically modify their profile pictures even if this exceeded normative levels, which was replicated in Study 4 (n = 199). These results suggest that women's self-objectification is associated with a desire for approval from others and this desire manifests in a willingness to modify self-presentation.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.