心理科学 ›› 2024, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (5): 1145-1152.DOI: 10.16719/j.cnki.1671-6981.20240513

• 社会、人格与管理 • 上一篇    下一篇

在线性客体化经历与女大学生身体羞耻感:一个有调节的中介模型

郎敏1, 叶子青*2, 叶一舵*3   

  1. 1成都师范学院教育与心理学院,成都,6111130;
    2福建师范大学海外教育学院,福州,350117;
    3福建师范大学心理学院,福州,350117
  • 出版日期:2024-09-20 发布日期:2024-10-21
  • 通讯作者: * 叶子青,E-mail:yeziqing@fjjxu.edu.cn;叶一舵,E-mail:yeyiduo@163.com

Experiences of Online Interpersonal Sexual Objectification and Body Shame in Female College Students: A Moderated Mediation Model

Lang Min1, Ye Ziqing2, Ye Yiduo3   

  1. 1School of Education and Psychology, Chengdu Normal University, Chengdu, 611130;
    2International College of Chinese Studies, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou, 350117;
    3School of Psychology, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou, 350117
  • Online:2024-09-20 Published:2024-10-21

摘要: 基于客体化理论,探讨在线性客体化经历与女大学生身体羞耻感的关系及作用机制,采用在线性客体化经历、理想美内化、自我客体化、身体羞耻感、自我同情等量表对350名女大学生进行调查。结果显示:(1)在线性客体化经历与女大学生的身体羞耻感水平显著正相关;(2)理想美内化和自我客体化在在线性客体化经历与身体羞耻感间起序列中介作用;(3)自我同情在在线性客体化经历→自我客体化→身体羞耻感这条路径的前半段调节作用显著。

关键词: 在线性客体化经历, 理想美内化, 自我客体化, 自我同情, 身体羞耻感, 女大学生

Abstract: With the popularity of online social activities, increasing information on sexual objectification appears in the process of online social activities, which not only speeds up the formation of women's self-objectification, but also increases the level of body shame. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between experiences of online interpersonal sexual objectification and body shame, as well as the mediating role of internalization of beauty ideals and self-objectification and the moderating role of self-compassion.
Female college students (N=350) voluntarily participated in this study and completed an online survey. They filled out questionnaires, including demographic questions, the Online Interpersonal Sexual Objectification Experience Scale, the Body Shame Scale, the Internalization of Beauty Ideals Scale, the Chinese Version of Self-Objectification Beliefs, the Behaviors Scale, and the Self-Compassion Scale. The final sample size was 339, after deleting 11 cases with problematic responses. The ages of participants ranged from 18 to 35 years (Mage = 20.29 years, SD = 2.99 years). Data were collected and analyzed with SPSS 22.0. The bias corrected percentile bootstrap method was used to analyze the moderated mediation model. Results showed that the common method variance was not supported in this study.
The results indicated that: (1) Experiences of online interpersonal sexual objectification were positively correlated with internalization of beauty ideals, self-objectification and body shame. Internalization of beauty ideals was positively correlated with self-objectification and body shame. Self-objectification was also positively correlated with body shame. Self-compassion was negatively correlated with interpersonal sexual objectification experiences, body shame, internalization of beauty ideals, and self-objectification. (2) Online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences were positively predicted internalization of beauty ideals, β = .40, p < .001; Online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences were also positively associated with self-objectification, β = .13, p < .01, and internalization of beauty ideals was positively linked with self-objectification, β = .45, p<.001, and self-objectification were also positively associated with body shame, β = .29, p < .001. The indirect effect of online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences via internalization of beauty ideals and self-objectification was .05 (95% CI = [ .03, .08]). This result indicated that internalization of beauty ideals and self-objectification mediated the relationship between online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences and body shame. (3) Self-compassion negatively predicted interpersonal of beauty ideals, β = -.20, p<.001, but the interaction of online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences and self-compassion was not significantly predicative of internalization of beauty ideals, β = .00, p > .05. Self-compassion negatively predicted self-objectification, β = -.28, p < .001. But the interaction of interpersonal of beauty ideals and self-compassion was not significantly predicative of self-objectification, β = .00, p > .05; and the interaction of online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences and self-compassion significantly predicted self-objectification, β = -.09, p < .05 (95% CI = [- .17, - .01]),
These findings indicated that the relationship between experiences of online interpersonal sexual objectification and body shame via internalization of beauty ideals was not moderated by self-compassion, but the relationship between online experiences of interpersonal sexual objectification and body shame through self-objectification was moderated by self-compassion.

Key words: online interpersonal sexual objectification experiences, body shame, internalization of beauty ideals, self-objectification, self-compassion, female college students