Muscle Talk Online and Impression Formation Based on Body Type: Comparisons Between Asian American and Caucasian American Males.

Emiko Taniguchi, Hye Eun Lee
Author Information
  1. Emiko Taniguchi: 1 Department of Communicology, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
  2. Hye Eun Lee: 2 School of Communication & Media, Ewha Womans University, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, South Korea. ORCID

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate how individuals form impressions about the self-esteem and life satisfaction of a male who engages in muscle talk on Facebook. The study examined (a) how a target's body build and peer-generated comments influence observers' impression of him, and (b) how such influences might be moderated by the cultural backgrounds of observers (Asian Americans and European Americans). A mock-up Facebook profile page was created in which two factors were manipulated: the target's body build (muscular, average, and overweight) and peer-generated messages (muscle encouraging and muscle discouraging), creating six different conditions. Male college students ( N = 508) were randomly assigned to one of the conditions. After viewing a mock-up Facebook page online, participants completed an online questionnaire assessing their impressions of the target's self-esteem and life satisfaction. Results showed that a muscular target was perceived as possessing higher levels of self-esteem and life satisfaction. Observers rated the target as having higher self-esteem when the target received muscle-encouraging messages than when the target received muscle-discouraging messages. No cultural differences were identified. Findings suggest the existence of weight bias when forming psychological impressions of others online. Findings also confirmed the important role of peer-generated messages in the impression formation process online.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Adult
Asian
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Humans
Male
Self Concept
Social Media
Somatotypes
White People

Word Cloud

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