City
Epaper

Selfies can make you vulnerable to eating disorders: Study

By IANS | Updated: October 12, 2023 23:35 IST

London, Oct 12 Love to take a selfie? Beware, it can make you vulnerable to eating disorders, warned ...

Open in App

London, Oct 12 Love to take a selfie? Beware, it can make you vulnerable to eating disorders, warned a study. Popular on social media, selfies are portraits taken by the photo's subject, who positions the camera away from their body but pointed back at themselves.

The study, published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE, showed that people tended to rate women's bodies as slimmer when viewed in selfie photographs than in photographs taken from other angles.

However, there was evidence that participants with a higher level of certain disordered eating symptoms tended to rate bodies in selfies more favourably.

On the basis of this finding and prior findings from other studies, the researchers suggest that viewing selfies could be more damaging than other types of photos to people who are vulnerable to developing eating disorders.

"Many of us see selfies every day as we browse the growing number of social media platforms. We know that filters can change the way that bodies appear," said the team led by Ruth Knight from St John University and Catherine Preston from University of York in the UK.

"This research suggests that the angle from which the photo is taken can change our judgments about body size, so that when consuming images on the internet, even simple unfiltered selfies, what we see is not necessarily an accurate representation of real life," they added.

Prior research has suggested that viewing selfies might affect viewers' judgments of the photo subjects' attractiveness and could, in some cases, lead to comparisons that affect viewers' satisfaction with their own appearance.

But, such research is limited and has focused more on perception of faces in photos than bodies. To shed new light, the team evaluated the judgments of female participants in response to photos from different angles of 10 female volunteer models dressed in exercise clothing.

With faces excluded, each volunteer's body was photographed at several angles: from a traditional external perspective, a selfie taken an arm's length away, a selfie taken using a selfie stick, or from the volunteer's own perspective, with the camera looking down from the chin.

Participants also completed a questionnaire to measure the degree to which they engaged in thoughts and behaviours related to disordered eating.

Analysing results from four different experiments, the researchers found that participants tended to judge bodies in the selfie images as slimmer than bodies in the external-perspective images, however, there were no significant differences in attractiveness ratings.

Chin-down images were judged to be less slim than selfies, and the least attractive of all the perspectives analysed.

These findings highlight potential links between social media use and body satisfaction.

However, the researchers noted several limitations of the study, such as a small number of participants and a lack of precise matching of photo angles between volunteer models, which could have influenced judgments.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports'Quite hard to get a gauge on him yet…,’ Ponting assesses Green's international career

EntertainmentShooting of Ken Karunaas's debut film as director wrapped up

EntertainmentHrithik Roshan's dance performance with his sons goes viral, internet can't stop talking

BusinessMastiZone Introduces a Thoughtfully Curated Christmas Offering for the Festive Season

MumbaiMumbai: Retired Woman Bank Employee Duped of ₹1.37 Crore in Fake Share Market Investment Scam in Kanjurmarg

International Realted Stories

InternationalWashington DC: Police Officer Injured After Vehicle Hits Him on I-695 After 3rd Street Tunnel

International"Bangladesh being disingenuous": Foreign affairs expert Sushant Sareen on visa services suspension

InternationalPentagon report to US Congress flags China's 'core interest' claim on Arunachal Pradesh

InternationalDhaka: Osman Hadi's family says "Interim govt can't avoid responsibility for murder"

InternationalUS, Venezuela face off defiantly at UNSC as tensions escalate