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Testing the discrepancy between actual and ideal body image with the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP).

APA Citation

Hernández-López, M., Quiñones-Jiménez, L., Blanco-Romero, A. L., & Rodríguez-Valverde, M. (2021). Testing the discrepancy between actual and ideal body image with the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP). Journal of Eating Disorders, 9, 82. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00434-4

Publication Topic
RFT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Figural drawings; Body image; Body dissatisfaction; Implicit attitudes; Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure; IRAP; Gender differences
Abstract

Background

The discrepancy between actual and ideal body image is considered an index of body dissatisfaction and a risk factor for eating disorders. While discrepancy has been traditionally tested with figural drawing rating scales, in recent times the use of implicit measures has been explored.

Methods

This study employs the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) to examine actual-ideal body-size discrepancy in a sample of 130 Spanish college students, as well as its utility to predict symptoms of eating disorders and other body-image relevant measures. Participants completed the Contour Drawing Rating Scale (CDRS). The three smallest and the three largest contour drawings of the CDRS were used as target stimuli in two different IRAP tasks: one in combination with the sample phrases “I am” and “I am not” (that assessed implicit actual body image), another in combination with the phrases “I want to be” and “I don’t want to be” (that assessed implicit ideal body image). After completing both IRAP tasks, participants completed explicit measures of body-image psychological inflexibility, body dissatisfaction, and symptoms of eating disorders.

Results

Results showed a small implicit bias towards thinness. Participants were faster in affirming than denying that they are thin and that they desire to be thin. They were also faster in affirming than denying that they are fat and that they want to be fat, but to a smaller extent than with thinness. Specifically, the implicit desire to be (or not be) fat emerged as an independent predictor of eating disorder symptoms, psychological inflexibility, and body dissatisfaction that significantly increased the predictive power of CDRS scores.

Conclusions

These findings underscore the need for further research on specific body image implicit beliefs towards fatness, both in subclinical and clinical populations, in order to examine whether willingness to accept the idea that one can have a larger body size can be a suitable target for prevention and intervention in eating disorders.