The effect of belief in weight controllability on anti-fat attitudes : An experimental manipulation

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Authors

KŠIŇAN Albert ALMENARA Carlos Arturo VACULÍK Martin

Year of publication 2017
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Revue Européenne de Psychologie Appliquée
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.erap.2016.12.004
Field Psychology
Keywords obesity; prejudice; anti-fat attitudes; weight bias; weightcontrollability belief
Attached files
Description Introduction: Anti-fat attitudes reflect a type of discrimination on the basis of body weight and are one of the last accepted types of social stigma. Objective: To evaluate the effect of exposure to priming messages about the causes of obesity on attitudes toward fat people. Method: Participants (N = 580, M age = 22.19, 64.1% female) were randomly assigned to one of three possible conditions and then provided responses on three AFA subscales: Dislike, Fear of fat, and Willpower. Results: Priming participants with messages confirming/challenging the weight controllability belief was associated with higher/lower levels on Willpower respectively compared to the control group. Unexpectedly, participants in both confirming and challenging groups showed significantly higher scores on Fear of fat. No differences were found on scores indicating Dislike. Conclusion: The current findings emphasize the effect of exposure to information about the causes of obesity on weight controllability beliefs.
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