Montreal Gazette

Feeling a connection to thin celebritie­s can improve women’s self-image, study finds

- MISTY HARRIS

Science has long had a bone to pick with skinny models, whose negative effect on women’s self-esteem is well documented. But a groundbrea­king new study has uncovered an intriguing exception to the rule.

When women feel a personal connection to a thin celebrity, researcher­s find they’re more likely to assimilate than to contrast. In other words, seeing their favourite slim star in a magazine actually gives their self-image a boost because they assume likeness – much the way spouses focus on the similariti­es, and not the difference­s, between them.

“It may be that we don’t need to reject thin celebritie­s, but rather make women feel closer to them in order to allow these protective benefits,” says lead author Ariana Young, who reports her findings in the journal Social Psychologi­cal & Personalit­y Science.

It’s a controvers­ial notion, to be sure. But across multiple experiment­s with some 150 college women, it consistent­ly proved true that a “parasocial” (one-sided) relationsh­ip with a thin female star or model moderated the negative effects otherwise seen with skinny media figures.

In the initial study, women who were led to believe they shared a birthday with an unknown thin model reported feeling better about their bodies after seeing her photo than those who didn’t perceive that similarity.

A second study showed women were more satisfied with their bodies after exposure to their favourite thin celebrity than when exposed to a thin celebrity who was less liked.

The final study suggested assimilati­on was the underlying mechanism behind the results of the previous experiment­s.

According to Young, the message for magazines wanting to showcase slim women is that they can reduce the potential for harm by using models or stars who are widely admired by fellow females.

She also adds that it’s “not surprising” nearly all previous body image research has shown women feel worse about their bodies after exposure to thin media images, since a contrast effect occurs when there’s no relationsh­ip with the person pictured. It’s only when women feel a personal connection that the paradigm appears to be flipped.

“We assimilate the traits of our favourite celebritie­s the way we do a real close other, such as a friend,” explains Young, a PHD can- didate at the University at Buffalo. “So, having a parasocial bond with favourite celebritie­s is protective, and may even be beneficial for women’s body image.”

Earlier studies have widely shown a link between body image concerns and one-sided relationsh­ips with skinny stars. This correlatio­n has previously been interprete­d as evidence that waifish media darlings are harmful to self-esteem.

In light of the latest findings, however, Young proposes it may instead be that women who dislike their bodies are drawn to thin celebritie­s because the images make them feel better about themselves.

“If we know that women are assimilati­ng the body traits of their favourite celebritie­s, we might assume that they seek out those celebritie­s when they’re feeling low,” Young says.

For recovered bulimic Caroline Adams Miller, now working as a profession­al coach, it’s a concept that makes a lot of sense.

“Thin women are not just a bag of bones. We shortchang­e them when we (ignore the fact) that they have other qualities or traits that other women might admire,” Adams Miller says. “When those qualities are positive, I can see why aligning with that person would be a good thing.”

 ?? DAVE HOGAN GETTY IMAGES ?? Rihanna at the Brit Awards this week: “We assimilate the traits of our favourite celebritie­s the way we do a real close other, such as a friend,” the author of a new study says.
DAVE HOGAN GETTY IMAGES Rihanna at the Brit Awards this week: “We assimilate the traits of our favourite celebritie­s the way we do a real close other, such as a friend,” the author of a new study says.

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