Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.

Objectification occurs when a person is perceived and/or treated like an object. With the present work, we overview the available measures of objectification and present a series of studies aimed at investigating the validity of the task of inverted body recognition proposed by Bernard and colleague...

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Main Authors: Cristina Zogmaister, Federica Durante, Silvia Mari, Franca Crippa, Chiara Volpato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229161
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spelling doaj-e5503b61edcf44e988802bac9b11c7f22021-03-03T21:31:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01152e022916110.1371/journal.pone.0229161Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.Cristina ZogmaisterFederica DuranteSilvia MariFranca CrippaChiara VolpatoObjectification occurs when a person is perceived and/or treated like an object. With the present work, we overview the available measures of objectification and present a series of studies aimed at investigating the validity of the task of inverted body recognition proposed by Bernard and colleagues (2012), which might potentially be a useful cognitive measure of objectification. We conducted three studies. Study 1 (N = 101) is a direct replication of Bernard et al.'s study: participants were presented with the same photos of sexualized male and female targets used in the original research. Study 2a (N = 100) is a conceptual replication: we used different images of scantily dressed male and female models. Finally, in Study 2b (N = 100), we investigated a boundary condition by presenting to participants photos of the same models as in Study 2a, but fully dressed and non-sexualized. Using mixed-effects models for completely-crossed classified data structures, we investigated the relationship between the inversion effect and the stimulus' asymmetry, sexualization and attractiveness, and the perceivers' self-objectification, sexism, and automatic woman-human association. Study 1 replicated the original results, showing a stronger inversion effect for male photos. However, no difference between male and female stimuli emerged in either Study 2a or 2b. Moreover, the impact of the other variables on the inversion effect was highly unstable across the studies. These aspects together indicate that the inversion effect depends on the specific set of stimuli and limits the generalizability of results collected using this method.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229161
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cristina Zogmaister
Federica Durante
Silvia Mari
Franca Crippa
Chiara Volpato
spellingShingle Cristina Zogmaister
Federica Durante
Silvia Mari
Franca Crippa
Chiara Volpato
Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cristina Zogmaister
Federica Durante
Silvia Mari
Franca Crippa
Chiara Volpato
author_sort Cristina Zogmaister
title Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
title_short Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
title_full Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
title_fullStr Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
title_full_unstemmed Measuring objectification through the Body Inversion Paradigm: Methodological issues.
title_sort measuring objectification through the body inversion paradigm: methodological issues.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Objectification occurs when a person is perceived and/or treated like an object. With the present work, we overview the available measures of objectification and present a series of studies aimed at investigating the validity of the task of inverted body recognition proposed by Bernard and colleagues (2012), which might potentially be a useful cognitive measure of objectification. We conducted three studies. Study 1 (N = 101) is a direct replication of Bernard et al.'s study: participants were presented with the same photos of sexualized male and female targets used in the original research. Study 2a (N = 100) is a conceptual replication: we used different images of scantily dressed male and female models. Finally, in Study 2b (N = 100), we investigated a boundary condition by presenting to participants photos of the same models as in Study 2a, but fully dressed and non-sexualized. Using mixed-effects models for completely-crossed classified data structures, we investigated the relationship between the inversion effect and the stimulus' asymmetry, sexualization and attractiveness, and the perceivers' self-objectification, sexism, and automatic woman-human association. Study 1 replicated the original results, showing a stronger inversion effect for male photos. However, no difference between male and female stimuli emerged in either Study 2a or 2b. Moreover, the impact of the other variables on the inversion effect was highly unstable across the studies. These aspects together indicate that the inversion effect depends on the specific set of stimuli and limits the generalizability of results collected using this method.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229161
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