Objective: Research has increasingly demonstrated the need to conceptualize the etiology of eating disorders beyond a sole focus on body image disturbance. Attachment patterns, media internalization, and self-objectification have been previously found to play a potential role in the development and maintenance of eating psychopathology.
Method: This study 1) examined the associations between eating behavior, body dissatisfaction, attachment, media internalization, and self-objectification, 2) evaluated media internalization and self-objectification as mediators of the relationship between insecure attachment patterns and both eating disorder symptomatology and body dissatisfaction, and 3) explored predictors of eating behavior in a sample of 252 Lebanese individuals between the ages of 18 and 25.