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Contents contributed and discussions participated by jela0302

jela0302

Dissatisfaction with Our Bodies & Eating Disorders - 0 views

  • During the 1800s the Rubenesque woman was part of the ideal female body image. Until the early 1900's, for a woman to have extra weight on her body and look voluptuous was a sign of good health and wealth.
  • In the early 1900's, our culture saw a shift from this plump, voluptuous female form to a thinner frame with less curves. The new female ideal of the 1920's was the thin, short haired flapper.
  • People started dieting and sports became popular pastimes as exercise began to be viewed as a healthy activity to enhance the body.
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  • In the 1950's the ideal female body image was Marilyn Monroe.
  • In the 1960's the waif-like look became popularized by the supermodel Twiggy Lawson. This was the first time in history that an underweight woman became the standard for the ideal body image.
jela0302

Walking A Thin Line - celebrities, mass media and eating disorders - Brief Article | Sc... - 0 views

  • Many teens don't realize the psychological or physical dangers behind reed-like bodies. Instead they uphold super-thin images as their ideal. "The media has a tremendous influence--impacting on girls to be thin," says Elaine Yudkovitz, a New York psychotherapist and specialist in eating disorders. The statistics are alarming: About one in 100 adolescent girls suffers from anorexia. The results can be deadly. Roughly 10 percent of anorexics die of medical complications from lack of food, or from suicide.
  • For years researchers have tied eating disorders to severe psychological problems. Now scientists have found a new link in the equation: brain chemistry.
  • have deficient amounts of serotonin, a brain chemical associated with moods and emotions, circulating in their brains.
jela0302

Body type preferences in Asian and Caucasian college students - Statistical Data Includ... - 0 views

  • The ideal body shape for women has become increasingly thinner over recent decades
  • Caucasian females exhibit more body image disturbance than other ethnic groups
  • However, other studies have found either no ethnic differences in body image disturbance (Cachelin, Striegel-Moore, & Elder, 1998), or that these minority groups actually reported greater body dissatisfaction compared to their Caucasian peers (Robinson et al., 1996).
jela0302

Body image attitudes of Asian American and Caucasian American women and men - 0 views

  • The findings indicated that Asian American women and men were lighter, shorter, and smaller than Caucasian American women and men. Regardless of these differences, all groups evidenced similar levels of dissatisfaction with physical features related to body size, though women wanted to be smaller and men wanted to be either larger or smaller
  • r height and their eyes than were Caucasian Americans.
jela0302

Eating Disorders and Body Image Concerns in Asian American Women: Assessment and Treatm... - 0 views

  • affect millions of individuals worldwide
  • While they have been more typically attributed to middle class, Caucasian, adolescent females, current research suggests that there is a similar prevalence of eating disorders and their symptoms, especially body dissatisfaction, among Asian American girls and women.
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    third paragraph end part. used
jela0302

Eating disorder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The media may be a significant influence on eating disorders through its impact on values, norms, and image standards accepted by modern society
  • Both society’s exposure to media and eating disorders have grown immensely over the past decade.
  • Hollywood displays an unrealistic standard of beauty
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  • ng disorder > is a compulsion to eat, or avoid eating, that negatively affects one's physical and mental health. > Anorexia nervosa > and > bulimia nervosa > are the most common eating disorders generally recognized by medical classification schemes > [1] > , with a significant diagnostic overlap between the two. > [2] > Together, they affect an estimated 5-7% of fem >
  • 5-7% of females in the United States during their lifetimes
  • Anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are the most common eating disorders generally recognized by medical classification schemes
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    Wiki: Eating Disorder
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    definition of eating disorder :)
jela0302

Dieting and Eating Disorders - Risks of Dieting in Eating Disorder Development - 0 views

  • Dieting creates many dynamics that encourage eating disorders
  • dieting is considered "normal" and is encouraged in western culture. In fact, when someone attempts to lose weight through dieting and does not, she often considers herself a failure.
  • Those who diet moderately are five times more likely to develop eating disorders than those who don't diet. For those who diet "severely," the chances of an eating disorder are eighteen times greater.
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  • When a diet starts, food becomes the enemy. If you see a food you like, you're annoyed because it's probably forbidden. If you encounter a food that is "okay" according to the diet, you're often just as annoyed because it's a food you don't like. Every encounter with food creates tension.
  • Beginning a diet can be a very exciting time. Thoughts of regaining a sense of life and self-respect are powerful incentives, and watching weight begin to drop is intoxicating. We have the sense that we can have what we want -- the things that other people (the healthy, slim ones) have.
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    3rd paragraph first part. used
jela0302

Mirror, mirror - A summary of research findings on body image - 0 views

shared by jela0302 on 15 Apr 08 - Cached
  • out of 10 women will be dissatisfied with their reflection, and more than half may see a distorted image.
  • Why are women so much more self-critical than men? Because women are judged on their appearance more than men, and standards of female beauty are considerably higher and more inflexible.
  • It has been estimated that young women now see more images of outstandingly beautiful women in one day than our mothers saw throughout their entire adolescence.
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  • In 1917, the physically perfect woman was about 5ft 4in tall and weighed nearly 10 stone. Even 25 years ago, top models and beauty queens weighed only 8% less than the average woman, now they weigh 23% less. The current media ideal for women is achievable by less than 5% of the female population – and that's just in terms of weight and size. If you want the ideal shape, face etc., it's probably more like 1%.
    • jela0302
       
      past & present
  • A Harvard University study showed that up to two thirds of underweight 12-year-old girls considered themselves to be too fat. By 13, at least 50% of girls are significantly unhappy about their appearance. By 14, focused, specific dissatisfactions have intensified, particularly concerning hips and thighs. By 17, only 3 out of 10 girls have not been on a diet – up to 8 out of 10 will be unhappy with what they see in the mirror.
  • up to 80% of women over-estimated their size.
  • Among women over 18 looking at themselves in the mirror, research indicates that at least 80% are unhappy with what they see.
  • Black and Asian women generally have a more positive body-image than Caucasian women, although this depends on the degree to which they have accepted the beauty standards of the dominant culture.
  • People's reactions to their reflection in the mirror may depend on recent exposure to idealised images of physical attractiveness.
  • Female dissatisfaction with appearance - poor body-image - begins at a very early age. Human infants begin to recognise themselves in mirrors at about two years old. Female humans begin to dislike what they see only a few years later.
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    Used
jela0302

Anorexia nervosa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Anorexia nervosa is a psychiatric diagnosis that describes an eating disorder characterized by low body weight and body image distortion with an obsessive fear of gaining weight. Individuals with anorexia are known to commonly control body weight through the means of voluntary starvation, purging, vomiting, excessive exercise, or other weight control measures, such as diet pills or diuretic drugs. It primarily affects adolescent females, however approximately 10% of people with the diagnosis are male. Anorexia nervosa is a complex condition, involving psychological, neurobiological, and sociological components.
  • promotion of thinness as the ideal female form in Western industrialised nations, particularly through the media.
  • Although anorexia nervosa is usually associated with Western cultures, exposure to Western media is thought to have led to an increase in cases in non-Western countries.
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    Definition of A.N (eating disorder.)
jela0302

Fear of death killing you? - 0 views

  • fear of death was lessened in people who had a sense of purpose. Sense of purpose is more of a spiritual principle than a religious activity. They found that sense of purpose had a positive effect on subjective well-being, alleviating fear of death and the anxiety that results
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