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The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory ...
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Engle, Erin K.,
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The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory -3: Development and validation of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions and Body-Image Avoidance scales /
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory -3: Development and validation of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions and Body-Image Avoidance scales // Erin K Engle.
作者:
Engle, Erin K.,
面頁冊數:
1 electronic resource (121 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 72-01, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International72-01B.
標題:
Clinical psychology. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3407043
ISBN:
9781109754070
The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory -3: Development and validation of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions and Body-Image Avoidance scales /
Engle, Erin K.,
The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory -3: Development and validation of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions and Body-Image Avoidance scales /
Erin K Engle. - 1 electronic resource (121 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 72-01, Section: B.
In the body-image literature, body checking and body-image avoidance are described as components of body-image disturbance. Most available measures that assess these behaviors are limited by their design for use with clinical groups, including individuals with eating disorders or body dysmorphic disorder. As research suggests that body checking and body-image avoidance commonly occur in nonclinical groups with general body-image problems, there is a need for an empirically validated assessment tool that adequately captures the spectrum of body-image behaviors, beyond the feature-focused terms typically used to define the constructs of body checking and body-image avoidance on existing measures. Accordingly, the Body-Image Behaviors Inventory-3 (BIBI-3) was developed and validated in this study with a sample of 645 college women from two sites. The BIBI-3, consisting of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions Scale (BICAS) and the Body-Image Avoidance Scale (BIAS), assesses ritualistic appearance-related compulsive actions and body-image avoidance, respectively. Convergent validity for the BIBI-3 was established using eight standardized measures of body image, personality, and psychological functioning. The BIBI-3 was relatively free of socially desirable responding and body-image compulsive actions were discriminant from nonappearance-related checking and dressing/grooming compulsions. Multiple regression analyses showed that the BIBI-3 was predictable from measures of body-image cognitive distortions, body satisfaction, perfectionistic self-presentation, and self-evaluative investment in appearance. Moreover, the BIBI-3 predicted pathological eating attitudes and behaviors above and beyond body dissatisfaction. With respect to ethnic group differences on the BIBI-3, Black women reported significantly more appearance-related fixing behaviors than White women, who endorsed greater efforts to hide or camouflage a disliked feature or aspect of appearance. Finally, strengths and limitations of this study, directions for future research, and clinical implications are discussed.
English
ISBN: 9781109754070Subjects--Topical Terms:
524863
Clinical psychology.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Avoidance
The Body -Image Behaviors Inventory -3: Development and validation of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions and Body-Image Avoidance scales /
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In the body-image literature, body checking and body-image avoidance are described as components of body-image disturbance. Most available measures that assess these behaviors are limited by their design for use with clinical groups, including individuals with eating disorders or body dysmorphic disorder. As research suggests that body checking and body-image avoidance commonly occur in nonclinical groups with general body-image problems, there is a need for an empirically validated assessment tool that adequately captures the spectrum of body-image behaviors, beyond the feature-focused terms typically used to define the constructs of body checking and body-image avoidance on existing measures. Accordingly, the Body-Image Behaviors Inventory-3 (BIBI-3) was developed and validated in this study with a sample of 645 college women from two sites. The BIBI-3, consisting of the Body-Image Compulsive Actions Scale (BICAS) and the Body-Image Avoidance Scale (BIAS), assesses ritualistic appearance-related compulsive actions and body-image avoidance, respectively. Convergent validity for the BIBI-3 was established using eight standardized measures of body image, personality, and psychological functioning. The BIBI-3 was relatively free of socially desirable responding and body-image compulsive actions were discriminant from nonappearance-related checking and dressing/grooming compulsions. Multiple regression analyses showed that the BIBI-3 was predictable from measures of body-image cognitive distortions, body satisfaction, perfectionistic self-presentation, and self-evaluative investment in appearance. Moreover, the BIBI-3 predicted pathological eating attitudes and behaviors above and beyond body dissatisfaction. With respect to ethnic group differences on the BIBI-3, Black women reported significantly more appearance-related fixing behaviors than White women, who endorsed greater efforts to hide or camouflage a disliked feature or aspect of appearance. Finally, strengths and limitations of this study, directions for future research, and clinical implications are discussed.
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