AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional media often focus on women's bodies instead of their faces, which are important for conveying social information.
  • This study analyzed how the facial expressions of thin-ideal, white women in sexualized versus non-sexualized images affect perceptions of competence, warmth, and authenticity among viewers.
  • Findings showed that sexualized images lead to lower ratings in competence and authenticity and increased self-objectification in viewers, while smiling intensity improved perceptions but didn't fully counteract the negative impact of sexualization.

Article Abstract

Objectification scholarship highlights how traditional media portrayals oftentimes direct attention toward women's bodies and away from their faces which communicate important social information. This study sought to investigate how thin-ideal, white women's facial expression potentially attenuates the negative effects of appearing in a sexually objectifying manner using validated imagery. In a 2 × 3 between-subjects experiment (N = 1001 U.S. adult women; M = 42.56, SD = 12.72), portraits of women varied in their sexualization (non-sexualized vs. sexualized) and facial expression (neutral expression, low-intensity smiling, high-intensity smiling) to better understand how these factors influence dimensions of social cognition (competence, warmth, authenticity), self-promotional attributions, and viewers' own self-objectification. Results revealed that viewers rated sexualized (vs. non-sexualized) women lower in competence and authenticity, as well ascribed more self-promotional explanations for their behavior. Moreover, exposure to sexualized women heightened viewers' self-objectification, regardless of facial expression. Results also indicated that smiling intensity positively influenced viewers' ratings of social cognition. However, there is little evidence that smiling intensity overrides the negative effects of sexualization. Implications for the sexual objectification of women are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2024.101721DOI Listing

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