Sunday, October 27, 2019
Social Media and Psychological Disorders
Social Media and Psychological Disorders    Topic:  Social media is a perfect environment to promote appearance concerns and eating  disorders.  It has long been known that exposure to traditional types of media, such as magazines, movies, and television, can increase body image concerns in youths (Tiggermann & McGill, 2004; Tiggermann & Polivy, 2010). Given that young people are now turning to Internet sources rather than print media, the potential impact of social media on body confidence should not be overlooked. In this essay, I would argue that social media has a negative influence on body image concerns and can lead to detrimental consequences.à     Much research has indicated that mass media  is considered the most influential and pervasive cause of body dissatisfaction  (Thompson, Heingberg, Altabe, & Tantleff-Dunn, 1999; Tiggermann, 2011).  Internalisation of body perfect ideas and the stereotypes about body size  begins when girls are as young as 3 years-old. It begins with baby girls  exposure to mass communicated images of Barbie dolls, then moves to television  advertisements and programs that celebrate ultra-thin models. It then  culminates in early adulthood with appearance-focused conversations,  fashion-focused stories, and picture-sharing on social networking websites. These  factors have been found to promote unattainable beauty ideals of often  photo-shopped women who are usually young, have a perfect body ratio and are  incredibly thin. Although traditional media are still widely consumed, new  forms of media or the Internet are being increasingly accessed. As of June  2017, approximately 52% of the worldââ¬â¢s population has access to the Internet  (Internet World Stats, 2017). Recent studies show that, as in traditional  media, there are many places on the Internet that promote the stereotypical  ideals of feminine beauty. For example, an analysis of advertisements aimed at  adolescents on the Internet indicates that most figures used in the  advertisements were young, thin, and attractive females (Slater, Tiggermann,  Hawkins, & Werchon, 2011). Additionally, Tiggermann and her co-researchers  found that Internet usage was related to greater internalization of thin-ideal,  appearance comparison, body dissatisfaction, and the drive for thinness  (Tiggermann & Miller, 2010).   Associated with the rise of the Internet are  Social Networking Sites (SNSs). As of June 2017, there are 2.46 billion social  media users around the globe, and 71 percent of internet users were also social  network users (Statista, 2017). Social media sites differ from the traditional  mass media in several ways. First of all, a large proportion of social  networking sites are peer-generated, which means users are simultaneously  information sources and receivers. Second, by affording users the ability to  shape, customise and direct online interactions, contemporary media transforms  what were once passive receivers of the formerly popular mass media, into  full-fledged communicators, with self-efficacy, and personal agency. Third,  social media are more personal than conventional impersonal mass media. Users  can bond with each other using technology, and content can revolve around the  self. Fourth, social media are interpersonally rich tools that offer graphics  apps, videos, and transformative multi-media cues that give the feeling of  presence, lending the opportunity to transport individuals to psychologically  involving domains that can encourage suspension of belief and attitude change.  Finally, while mass media has a large heterogeneous audience, social media  sites cater to communities of individuals with the same interests, ideas, and  opinions. They are fundamentally media of ones peers.   An amount of research on sociocultural factors and body image has emphasised the role of social comparisons in explaining media effects on body image concerns (Thompson et al. 1999). According to social comparison theory, people find it diagnostic and functional to compare themselves to others, especially to those who have similar attributes that are central to their definition of self. This has important implications for the effects of social media. Aforementioned, social media are the domain of peers, and peer comparisons are greatly salient to adolescents. In addition, upward social comparisons with attractive peers can actually lead to more negative self-attractiveness ratings than comparisons with attractive models in advertisements, who are less similar and in a less diagnostic comparison group. Social media are full of pictures of peers and create a favourable environment for social comparisons. Negative comparisons can be particularly likely on social media when young women c   ompare their pictures with peers without knowing that those photographs might be digitally edited. More specifically, one experimental study indicates that upward social comparison can occur with social media profiles. Both male and female participants reported negative emotional states and showed some signs of body dissatisfaction when they viewed profiles with physically attractive photographs, meanwhile, those who viewed unattractive users profile pictures reported less negative emotional states (Hafekamp & Krà £mer, 2011).   Previous studies show that exposure to peers  who closely match the thin ideal has been found to increase body  dissatisfaction in women (Krones, Stice, Batres, & Orjada, 2005). It is also  interesting to note that comparisons to peers and models can lead to different  results in regard to womens body image concerns. The reason is the appearance  of peers seems to be more realistic and attainable than the appearance of  models or celebrities because peers often have the same resources and lifestyle  to oneself. In addition, in social media contexts, peers are not the only  targets of social comparisons but online models or celebrities are as well.  Beautiful pictures of models and celebrities are shared and posted on many  social platforms such as Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. They are usually  airbrushed to remove any flaws and this, in combination with the efforts of  professional staff (such as hairstylist, make-up artists, photographers, etc) ensures  that there is a huge gap between what is thought of beautiful and what can be  attainable. We are aspiring to an ideal that does not exist, when constantly  exposed to images of unrealistic men and women that have been digitally  constructed.à     When we look at the negative influences of  social media on body image concerns, exposure is not the only factor, we also  need to look at the ways in which social media is used. Using social networking  sites is far different than passive exposure to traditional mass media. It is  an interactive process, users are capable of creating and presenting their own  media content while also viewing content created by others. A classic  perspective of mass communication is uses and gratifications. It indicates that  individuals use media to satisfy needs, seeking gratifications to fulfil  motives and deriving gratifications from media use that can be both  psychologically functional or dysfunctional (Rubin 2009). When applied to  social media and body image concern, it suggests that individuals who are  vulnerable to body image disturbances will seek gratification from social  media. Young people who have low self-esteem and high thin-ideal  internalisation are likely to seek gratification from social media. They may  check their profile pictures online to satisfy reassurance needs, spending a  considerable amount of time looking and comparing their pictures to those of  their less attractive peers to validate their appearance, or sharing pictures  of celebrities and models to ritualistically escape appearance-related personal  distress. By doing this, they try to satisfy psychological  appearance-gratifying needs and convince themselves they fit the thin-ideal of  others. Eventually, young people usually end up feeling disappointed and hurt because  the ultimate satisfaction of these needs cannot come from external sources but  can only be found internally.   Social media also unabashedly promote anorexic and bulimic lifestyles through a lot of pro-anorexia or pro-ana and pro-bulimia (pro-mia) Websites (Levine and Chapman 2011). Nowadays, there are many websites that devoted to promoting pro-anorexic ideals. They usually contain positive represent of an anorexic lifestyle; religiously-based metaphors; and more than 10 core themes, for example, perfection (the norms linking thinness with perfection), transformation (eating disorders can transform a person from ugly and fat to thin and beautiful), and success (the association of success with strength and ability to keep the weight off). In addition, Healthy Living blogs promote the image of thin appearance and deliver disordered nutritional messages, and also containing self-objectifying messages about women (Boepple and Thompson 2013). Two experiments indicate that exposure to pro-ana Websites exerts a number of negative influences, such as lower self-esteem, and decreased perceived attrac   tiveness of oneself (Bardone-Cone and Cass 2007). Pro-mia Websites can also have harmful effects for young women (Levine and Chapman 2011).  In conclusion, traditional media has long been known for its negative influence on body image concerns and behaviours through the promotion of body perfect ideals, but there are far fewer studies on the detrimental impacts of social media. In this essay, I argue that social media provides a perfect environment for negative social comparisons and gratification that could lead to appearance concerns and eating disorders amongst users.  References  Bardone-Cone, A. M., & Cass, K. M. (2007). What does viewing a proanorexia website do? An experimental examination of website exposure and moderating effects. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 40, 537ââ¬â548. doi:10.1002/eat  Boepple, L., & Thompson, J. K. (2013). A content analysis of healthy living blogs: Evidence of content thematically consistent with dysfunctional eating attitudes and behaviors. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 47, 362ââ¬â367. doi:10.1002/eat.22244.  Dittmar, H., Halliwell, E., & Ive, S. (2006). Does Barbie make girls want to be thin? The effect of experimental exposure to images of dolls on the body image of 5ââ¬â8-year-old girls. Developmental Psychology, 42, 283-292.  Dittmar, H. (2009). How Do ââ¬Å"Body  Perfectâ⬠ Ideals in the Media Have a Negative Impact on Body Image and  Behaviors? Factors and Processes Related to Self and Identity. Journal of  Social and Clinical Psychology, 28(1), 1-8. doi:10.1521/jscp.2009.28.1.1  Fardouly, J., Diedrichs, P. C.,  Vartanian, L. R., & Halliwell, E. (2015). Social comparisons on social  media: The impact of Facebook on young womens body image concerns and mood. BodyImage,  13(SupplementC), 38-45. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2014.12.002  Ferguson, C. J., Muà ±oz, M. E.,  Garza, A., & Galindo, M. (2014). Concurrent and Prospective Analyses of  Peer, Television and Social Media Influences on Body Dissatisfaction, Eating  Disorder Symptoms and Life Satisfaction in Adolescent Girls. Journal of Youth  and Adolescence, 43(1), 1-14. doi:10.1007/s10964-012-9898-9  Haferkamp, N., & Kramer, N.  C. (2011). Social comparison 2.0: examining the effects of online profiles on  social-networking sites. Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw, 14(5), 309-314.  doi:10.1089/cyber.2010.0120  Internet World Stats (2017). World Internet Users Statistics and 2017 World Population Stats. Retrieved: http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm  Kim, J. W., & Chock, T. M.  (2015). Body image 2.0: Associations between social grooming on Facebook and  body image concerns. Computers in Human Behavior, 48(Supplement C),  331-339. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2015.01.009  Krones, P. G., Stice, E.,  Batres, C., & Orjada, K. (2005). In vivo social comparison to a thin-ideal  peer promotes body dissatisfaction: a randomized experiment. Int J Eat  Disord, 38(2), 134-142. doi:10.1002/eat.20171  Levine, M. P., & Chapman, K. (2011). Media influences on body image. In T. F. Cash & L. Smolak (Eds.), Body image: A handbook of science, practice, and à   prevention (2nd ed., pp. 101ââ¬â109). New York: Guilford Press.  Perloff, R. M. (2014). Social  Media Effects on Young Womenââ¬â¢s Body Image Concerns: Theoretical Perspectives  and an Agenda for Research. Sex Roles, 71(11), 363-377.  doi:10.1007/s11199-014-0384-6  Rubin, A. M. (2009). Uses-and-gratifications perspective on media effects. In J. Bryant à  Ã   & M. à   B. Oliver (Eds.), Media effects: Advances in theory and research (3rd ed., pp. 165ââ¬â184). New York: Routledge.   Slater, A., Tiggemann, M.,  Hawkins, K., & Werchon, D. (2011). Just One Click: A Content Analysis of  Advertisements on Teen Web Sites. Journal of Adolescent Health, 50(4),  339-345. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2011.08.003  Statista (2017). Number of social media users worldwide 2010-2021. Retrieved 30/10/17 from: https://www.statista.com/statistics/278414/number-of-worldwide-social-network-users/   Thompson, J. K., Heinberg, L. J., Altabe, M., & Tantleff-Dunn, S. (1999). Exacting beauty: Theory, assessment, and treatment of body image disturbance. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association  Tiggemann, M. (2011). Sociocultural perspectives on human appearance and body image. In T. F. Cash & L. Smolak (Eds.), Body image: A handbook of science, practice, and prevention (2nd ed., pp. 12ââ¬â19). New York: Guilford Press  Tiggemann, M., Polivy, J., & Hargreaves, D. (2009). The processing of thin ideals in fashion magazines: A source of social comparison or fantasy? Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 28, 73-93.  Tiggemann, M., & McGill, B.  (2004). The Role of Social Comparison in the Effect of Magazine Advertisements  on Womens Mood and Body Dissatisfaction. Journal of Social and Clinical  Psychology, 23(1), 23-44. doi:10.1521/jscp.23.1.23.26991    
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