Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
902884 Body Image 2014 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•College students completed well-known measures of body dissatisfaction.•Means on all measures completed were significantly higher in women than in men.•Clinically significant DIF was found on one item inquiring about laxative use.

Many widely used measures of body image were developed using all-female samples and thus may not adequately capture the male experience of body dissatisfaction. The current study examined differential item functioning (DIF) in three commonly-used measures of body image: The Body Shape Questionnaire (N = 590, 39.7% male), the Body Dissatisfaction subscale of the Eating Disorders Inventory (N = 529, 44.6% male), and the Shape and Weight Concern subscales of the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire (N = 1116, 43.5% male). Participants completed a series of measures evaluating body image and eating pathology. Results evidenced statistically significant DIF in several of the items; one item met criteria for clinically significant DIF. While most items did not evidence clinically elevated levels of DIF, additional evaluation is necessary in order to determine overall quality of the measures in terms of capturing the experience of male body image concerns.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Psychiatry and Mental Health
Authors
, , , ,